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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM OR WWW.MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

New Southern
High School
unvieled... C1

Showers and T-storms
likely. High of 85. Low
of 67... Page A2

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Local football
action... B1

Sally Caldwell, 66

Donna Faye Keesee, 78

Barbara Coldiron, 63

Clarence Mason, 84

Stephen B. Fisher, 64

Bonnie Patrick, 85

$2.00

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2013

Vol. 47, No. 34

Groundbreaking held for Meigs ER facility
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS — “Victory for
Meigs County, victory for the State of
Ohio, and victory for Appalachia.”
That was one of the statements made
by Congressman Bill Johnson on Friday
morning in reference to the new Meigs
Emergency Room Facility.
Congressman Johnson joined many
local and state officials at the official
groundbreaking ceremony for the facility at 41861 Pomeroy Pike near
Pomeroy. Dozens of local residents and
current Holzer employees were also in
attendance for the ceremony.
The facility will be operated by Holzer Health System and is being constructed through a collaborative effort

with the Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation (CIC).
Paul Reed, President of the CIC, welcomed all of those in attendance and
recognized many of the those in attendance who have played a role in making
the long awaited facility a reality.
A constant theme among the speakers
was of the time that has been put into
making the facility happen and the need
for such a facility in Meigs County.
Joy Padgett, assistant director for the
Governor’s Office of Appalachia seemed
to sum it up best, saying it was an “example of patience and perseverance.”
Speakers at the ceremony included
Representative Debbie Phillips, Commissioner Randy Smith, Director of
See GROUND | A2

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Tribune

Speakers from Friday’s groundbreaking ceremony and board members from Holzer Health
Systems turn the first shovels of dirt at the site of the new emergency facility.

Middleport
awarded funds
for trail project
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Charles Maxam, owner of Just Fired Ceramic Studio in Gallipolis, stands with a selection of his works.

Just Fired-up: Ceramics studio opens in region
Agnes Hapka

ahapka@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — There’s a new arts-related venue in
the region, and Charles Maxam is at the (potter’s) wheel.
Just Fired Ceramic Studio was developed to introduce
ceramics into the community, as part of an effort to bring
more arts and culturally-diverse businesses to the area.
Maxam, who recently graduated from the University
of Rio Grande with a four-year visual arts degree and a
concentration in ceramics, is offering ceramics classes
daily for any experience level, ages five and older.
“I can do classes for one person, and up to five people,” Maxam said. “As long as people have some dexterity and a little strength, I’ll teach them anything from
traditional wheel-throwing to slab-sculptural pinch-pot.”
Maxam said he fell in love with ceramics while at Rio;
he had never had any experience with them, other than in
high school, before he embarked on his bachelor’s degree.
“When I started taking some sculpture courses, ceramics being one of the components of that, I just took to it
like a fish in water,” said Maxam. “It was like a marriage.
In a past life I must have been a potter.”
He won several prizes for his work while at Rio,
including artist of the year.
“I think that was a springboard for my confi-

Just Fired Ceramics Studio is new to the area; it is lo-

See CERAMICS | A2 cated beside Nybble Cafe on Court Street in Gallipolis.

Leaders reflect on anniversary of Dr. King’s speech
Nicolas Claussen

Special to the Sunday Times-Sentinel
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — The world has
changed over and over again during
the last 50 years, but have enough
positive changes been made and
what areas still need to be improved?
That’s one question that many
people have been asking around the
country with the observance this
week of the 50th anniversary of the
March on Washington and the famous ‘I Have A Dream” speech by
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
A new study released by the Pew
Research Center just this week
states that 45 percent of all Americans say the country has made
substantial progress toward racial
equality, while 49 percent says that
a lot more needs to be done.
In order to gain local perspectives
on the anniversary of the March on
Washington and the state of civil
rights in southeastern Ohio, we talked with two people with strong ties
to Gallia County, Elaine Armstrong
and Robert Gordon.
Armstrong, who is retired from
the University of Rio Grande/Rio

“That is, we must encourage our young people
to get the best possible education they can …
to be prepared academically to make a positive
difference in the world. Stop bellyaching and
complaining about what or why something is, or
is not, like it should be … get out there and make
a positive difference in our neighborhoods, our
communities and in society.”
—Elaine Armstrong
Grande Community College and
lives in Bidwell, was 17 in 1963
when the March on Washington was
held. She grew up in Bidwell and attended North Gallia High School,
which at the time had the largest enrollment of minority students of the
county schools. The Gallipolis City
Schools had a larger enrollment of
minority students, she added.
At the time, there were only three
television stations that could be
picked up locally, and the Civil Rights

movement was one of the main items
covered on the news.
“We could see the news reports
about the sit-ins, boycotts, freedom
riders, and the effort to get people
registered to vote. I remember
watching the daily reports about
the fire hoses being used on demonstrators, both black and white, who
were marching together for freedom
and integration of lunch counters,
and buses, for jobs and housing,”
See SPEECH | A3

MIDDLEPORT
—
Middleport Village has
been awarded a grant
of up to $2,381,597 in
federal funds secured
through the Ohio Department of Transportation
(ODOT) for construction of the long-awaited
Multi-Use Trail Project
development.
That
amount
will
cover all but the 20 percent local share of the
construction cost which
must be provided from
a non-federal funding
source, according to
Mayor Michael Gerlach.
He said the village is
now in the process of applying for a grant from
the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources to
cover the balance of the
construction cost.
The village already
owns the land along the
river that the trail will
follow. The location for
the path follows the area
once used by the railroad. Plans call for the
trail to extend from near
the Dairy Queen down to
Custer Street, a distance
of about 1 and 1/2 miles.
Gerlach said that meetings with ODOT, the
engineers who designed
the project, and Buckeye Hills are upcoming
to make sure everything
including the funding is

in place. As for the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, the decision
on funding from that
agency will come sometime after Feb. 1 which
is the deadline to make
application.
“The engineering and
design work for the project has been completed,” said Gerlach, “and
now we’re just waiting
for the remainder of
funding so that construction can begin.” He
expects that to happen
sometime next year.
The plan design calls
for a wide trail with one
lane being for walkers,
and a second lane for
someone on a bike or
other moving vehicle, or
for several people to walk
beside each other. While
the trail will be lighted by
the current street lights,
the hope is for special
lighting and for benches
where walkers can sit and
rest as needed.
Gerlach cited a concern about community
health which is drawing
more and more people
to turn to walking which
they sometimes do along
a road traveled by vehicles. He said the trail will
provide a safer and more
secure place for those
who already get out and
walk, while attracting
others who recognize the
health benefits and enjoy
the fresh air.

Woman’s body
found at Gallia
County rest area
Stephanie Filson

sfilson@civitasmedia.com

RODNEY — The Gallia County Sheriff’s Office
confirmed that a female body was discovered at the
eastbound U.S. 35 rest area Thursday afternoon.
According to law enforcement, the body of
Wilma Wright, age 58, of Chillicothe, was discovered in a van parked in the lot of the U.S. 35 rest
area. Gallia County Coroner Dan Whiteley was on
scene, along with Gallia County Sheriff Joe Browning. Wright’s body has been sent to the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office for autopsy. A cause of
death has not yet been determined.
The death is under the continued investigation
of the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office, Ohio State
Highway Patrol and Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation (BCI).

�� îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday, September 1, 2013

Ceramics

Ground

From Page A1

From Page A1

dence to start something
like this,” said Maxam.
The studio itself is comprised of a main work area
and a damp room, where
Maxam stores recently finished pieces.
“I put them in there to
slow down the drying process, so they don’t crack
or lose their appendages,”
Maxam explained.
Maxam has a traditional
treading wheel and three
throwing wheels. He normally starts his students
out on “wedging,” which is
basic manipulation of clay,
before they move on to
work with the wheels.
“I have started people
with
wheel-throwing,”
Maxam said, “but I usually
start them on the slab table
with a pinch-pot or a coil
mug, or a wrap, which are
done by hand. There are
different avenues for testing people’s ability.”
Maxam said that this
region has a rich ceramic
history.
“Clay is actually degenerated granite. In the
millions of years that the
Appalachian mountains
have been in existence,
the erosion process has
been creating these massive deposits of clay. And
that’s one of the reasons
why the region was at one
time a hub of ceramic production,” noted Maxam.
In addition to running
classes any day of the
week, Maxam himself
makes a full range of ceramics for sale: pots, tea
sets, dishes, candle holders jugs, and many other
objects both for utilization
and decoration. All ceramics in the studio are for
sale, and Maxam also sells
blocks of clay.
“With a lot of my pieces I
maintain the edge, the more
organic and earthy shape.
It looks almost like it grew
this way,” said Maxam.
It’s a good way to live,
said Maxam.
“I get to earn a living from

the Ohio Development
Services Agency David
Goodman,
Chairman
of the Board of Holzer
Health Systems Brent
Saunders, and Holzer
Health Systems Chief Executive Officer T. Wayne
Munro, MD.
Johnson referred to the
work to bring an emergency facility to Meigs
County as a “real example of national, state and
local government and
private sector innovation working together to
make something happen.
Reed also noted the
involvement of Mick
Davenport, former Meigs
County Commissioner,
stating that Davenport
dedicated his service
to improving the health
care available in Meigs
County.
The work of Perry Varnadoe, Meigs County
Economic Development
Director, was also noted
by Reed. He stated that
without the work of Varnadoe these thing would
not be happening today.
Phillips stated the facility had been a long
time in the making, adding that for those carrying the torch on the
project, it had been like
a relay race passed down
from one to another. She
noted Davenport and the
late Charlie Wilson as
some of those who had
previously worked on
the project to Perry Varnadoe and Paul Reed as
those currently working
toward the goal.
Reed also read a letter
sent by State Senator
Lou Gentile congratulating those involved
on the groundbreaking
of the project.
Commissioner Smith
reflected back to 16 years
ago when he graduated
high school from Meigs,
located
just
beyond
where the new facility
will sit.
Smith noted that the
road used to stop in the
area of the school and
that none of the medical
facilities were present,
with the area an empty
lot from which all of this
is emerging.
“The facility will be a
monumentally piece of
the health care campus,”
said Smith.
The campus also includes Hopewell Health
Center (formerly Family
Healthcare) and the future Meigs County Emergency Operations Center.
The emergency room and
the operations center
will be side by side with a
helipad located between
them. Hopewell Health
Center is on the opposite
side of the road.
As Reed introduced
Munro and Saunders to
give there remarks, Reed
noted that this was the
first major project of the
combined Holzer Health

Maxam at his traditional treadwheel, trimming a piece before
storing it in the damp-room.

Samples of Maxam’s previous work are always available for
viewing in the studio, and always for sale.

the name “Just Fired,”
or via email at justfiredceramics@gmail.com, or
by calling at the studio
phone, (740) 645-1625.

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Gallipolis, Ohio

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Dave Wine

Sales Consultant-Owner
Open M-Th 10-6 Friday 10-5

Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation Board
members take part in the official groundbreaking ceremony.

Congressman Bill Johnson speaks during the groundbreaking
ceremony on Friday morning.

A board displayed at the groundbreaking shows an image of
what the facility will look like when completed.

System, and would provide emergency care to
one of two counties in
the state which does not
currently have an emergency facility.
Saunders stated that
Holzer is pleased to expand services to the area.
Munro noted the current facility for primary
care and urgent care
services as signs of Holzer Health System’s current involvement in the
county, while adding
that they look forward to
becoming more involved
in the future.
Goodman
presented
both Holzer Health System and the CIC with a
proclamation from the
Governor’s office for their
efforts on the project.
Director of Chaplaincy
Services Fred Williams,
Ph.D., gave the invocation
before the National Anthem and Pledge of Allegiance lead by Hal Kneen

60441745

Chester Fire Department

Labor Day BBQ

Monday September 2

60446307

60446475

art,” he said. “It’s a dream.”
For more information
on classes and the ceramics themselves, Maxam
may be contacted via
his Facebook page under

Board members from Holzer Health System take part in the
official groundbreaking.

Chicken, Ribs, and
Homemade
H
Ice Cream
Service starts at 11am

to open the ceremony.
Following the speakers, the official ground
breaking was held.
The facility will be operated by Holzer Health
System and is being established in a collaborative effort with the Meigs County
Community Improvement
Corporation (CIC).
The facility is expected
to open in the fall of 2014
and create around 30 new
full-time positions.
The facility will feature
a 24-hour staffed emergency department, equipped
with
state-of-the-art
equipment and a helipad.
The building, which
has been designed by Don
Dispenza of Panich and
Noel, will include eight
treatment rooms, one
double trauma room, two
triage rooms, lab, pharmacy, general radiation
and CT suite, along with
areas for public and staff.
Kinsale Corporation of
Chester, Ohio, will be the
contractor for the project.
The $6 million project
is financed by Ohio Valley
Bank, with the commissioners having previously
approved a bond resolution for the project.
The facility project was
also assisted by Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
Regional Development
District, the Governor’s
Office of Appalachia,
Senators Sherrod Brown
and Rob Portman, Congressman Bill Johnson,
Ohio Senator Lou Gentile, and Ohio Representative Debbie Phillips.

�Sunday, September 1, 2013

%9:@î,2==6Jî�@C642DE
Sunday: Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 5 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 85. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent. New rainfall amounts of less
than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible
in thunderstorms.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Labor Day: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 83. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75.
Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 52.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 74.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 55.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 79.

�2==:2î�@F?EJî�C:67D
Gallipolis trash pickup schedule set

GALLIPOLIS — The City of Gallipolis announces that
trash and recyclable bin pickup is scheduled one day later
than the resident’s usually scheduled pick-up day, due to
the Labor Day holiday observance.

Gallipolis offices closed for holiday

GALLIPOLIS — Offices in the Gallipolis Municipal
Building and Municipal Court will be closed Monday,
September 3, in observance of the Labor Day holiday.

Highway Department schedule

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî�

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Events
Sunday, Sept. 1

PERRY TWP. — Fellure Family Reunion, 10
a.m., O.O. McIntyre Park
(Ruffled Grouse Shelter
House). Dinner will be
held at 12:30 p.m. Bring a
covered dish.

Monday, Sept. 2

OHIO VALLEY — All
Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehicle Deputy Registrar
locations across the state
will be closed for the Labor Day holiday. Normal
business operations will
resume on Tuesday, September 3.
OHIO VALLEY —
Woodland Centers will
close clinic locations
in Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs counties to observe Labor Day. Normal
operation with resume
Tuesday, Sept. 3. Emergency services can be accessed by calling (740)

446-5500 in Gallia or
(800) 252-5554 in Jackson and Meigs.
CROWN CITY — A
blood drive will be held
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Providence Missionary
Baptist Church Fellowship Hall, located at 3570
Teens Run Road. Donors
will be entered to win one
of five American Express
gift cards in the amount
of $1,000. Please bring
photo ID or American
Red Cross donor card.

lar monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Gallipolis
Municipal Building, 333
Third Ave., Gallipolis.
The meeting room may
be accessed through the
side entrance door adjacent to 2 1/2 Alley.

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Board of
Health will meet at 9 a.m.
in the conference room of
the Gallia County Service
Center, 499 Jackson Pike.

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Neighborhood Watch
meets at 1:30 p.m. at 518
Second Ave. police station
meeting room.

Tuesday, Sept. 3

Saturday, Sept. 7

GALLIPOLIS — Yard
sale sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary of the VFW
Post 4464, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.,
134 Third Avenue.

GALLIPOLIS — Triad/SALT Council meeting, 1 p.m., Gallia County
Courthouse, second floor
meeting room. Everyone
is welcome.

Sunday, Sept. 8

Saturday, Sept. 28

POMEROY — Holzer
Clinic and Holzer Medical
Center retirees will meet
for lunch, 12 p.m., Wild
Horse Cafe, Pomeroy.
PORTER — Springfield
Township Crime Watch
meeting, 6 p.m., Springfield Township Fire Department.
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis City Commission will hold its regu-

Wednesday,
Sept. 4

RIO GRANDE — Evans/Pennyfare
Reunion
will be held from 11 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at Bob Evans
Shelterhouse #2, Canoe
Livery Road, Rio Grande.

Covered dish dinner will
be served at 1 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
—
Montgomery
Family
Reunion will be held at
O.O. McIntyre Park Wild
Turkey Shelter. Covered
dish lunch will be served
at 1 p.m.

Monday, Sept. 9

Tuesday, Sept. 10

PERRY TWP. — Farm
City Day, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.,
Raccoon Creek County
Park, O.O. McIntyre
Park District, 518 Dan
Jones Road.

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GALLIPOLIS — Beginning Tuesday, September
3, the Gallia County Highway Department will be
GALLIA COUNTY — The 13th
returning to an eight hour day, five days per week Annual Gallia County Chamber of
schedule. The regular hours will be from 7 a.m.-3 Commerce Golf Scramble will be
p.m., Monday through Friday.
Thursday, September 12, 2013, at
the Cliffside Golf Course, according
Cheshire Village Council meeting
to Lori Young, chair of the event.
CHESHIRE — The regular September 2 council Lunch will be served at 12 p.m.,
meeting for the Cheshire Village Council has been with the Shotgun Start at 1 pm.
moved to Tuesday, September 10 due to the holiday
A number of sponsorship opporand other matters. Meetings are held at 6:30 p.m. at tunities are available. Corporate
the village hall, 119 Ohio 554, Cheshire.
Sponsorship is $300, and includes
four players, a team. Sponsorship
of a Tee/Green, is $100 and includes one player. Individuals, who
wish to play in the tournament, will
pay $60 to register.
This year, the Tournament format
remains a “bring your own team”
event. If you do not have a team, but
NEW YORK (AP) — $3. And that’s a 42 percent
Days of finding a quarter spike from the $2.60 per still want to play, as indicated above,
under your pillow are long tooth that the Tooth Fairy individuals are more than welcome.
gone. The Tooth Fairy no gave in 2011, according to a The Chamber Golf Committee will
longer leaves loose change. new survey by payment pro- make a team for you. All teams must
Kids this year are get- cessor Visa Inc., released have a total handicap of 40 or more,
ting an average of $3.70 Friday with an update of with only one team member with a
per lost tooth, a 23 percent the company’s Tooth Fairy handicap of 10 or below.
When you pre-register your team,
jump over last year’s rate of personal finance app.

Tooth Fairy inflation:
Price of a tooth nears $4

you may purchase Skins and Mulligans, and pay for it all at the same time.
New this year is the Cup Sponsor at $200, with only one available. This will be on a first come,
first serve basis. For details on
this sponsorship, call the Chamber at 740/446-0596.
There are two very exciting new
additions to this year’s Tournament.
The Hole-In-One prize will be a new
car, a brand new 2014 Chevy Cruze. Sponsoring this new prize are
Peoples Bank and Raymond James
Financial Services, Inc., arranged by
Jo Ellen Fisher. Also new this year is
the Ball Drop, with a prize of $1000.
Only 200 tickets will be sold for this
opportunity. Tickets are available at
the Chamber office, in advance of
the Tournament at $10 each, or five
for $45. Participation in the Golf
Tournament is not required to purchase tickets.
More than $2,000 will be awarded in cash prizes this year. They

include $500 for 1st place in the
Tournament, $300 for 2nd place
and $200 for 3rd place. Six gift
certificates of $25 each will be
awarded to the person getting Closest to the Pin on hole #4, Closest
to the Pin on hole #13, the Longest
Putt on hole #2, the Longest Putt
on hole # 18, the Longest Drive
for a Male on hole #12 (must be in
the fairway) and new this year, the
Longest Drive for a Female on hole
#12 (must be in the fairway).
As pointed out by Lorie Neal,
IOM, Executive Director of the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, “This a great opportunity
for golfers in the area to enjoy a day
of food, fun and friendships at the
Cliffside Golf Course. We look forward to good weather and a great
turnout. Please mark your calendars and join us”.
For additional information, contact the Chamber at 446-0596, or
stop at the Chamber office, 16 State
Street in downtown Gallipolis.

Speech
Armstrong said.
“Everyone in my family watched ‘bug-eyed’ at
the daily news reports.
We, too, wanted what the
marchers and protestors
wanted, but primarily talked about it only between
family members and close
friends. It was not something that was discussed
at school or in the community on an open basis.
It seemed to be a private
thing. Some people felt
that changes definitely
needed to be made, while
others felt that by marching and civil disobedience, no matter how nonviolent, that the actions
may stir up negative feelings in the community
… and how those feelings may affect employment or our perceived
status in the community
was always a concern,
especially among older
people. They had worked
long and hard for what
little they had, and were
fearful of losing it or how
they would be perceived
by the larger community.”
Dr. King was considered a hero in her home,
and Armstrong explained
that her parents told her
often about the struggles
they faced due to the color
of their skin.
“They had experienced
first-hand what Dr. King
was fighting for. I think
because my parents experienced so much bigotry,
segregation and racism
… that I understood the
plight of Dr. King much
more than the youth of
today. I knew people directly that had actually
experienced the problems
and issues that Dr. King
and others were fighting
against,” she said.
Gordon, a former Gallipolis City Manager
who today works for
Ohio University, was
just a baby in 1963.
“I entered a world of
inequalities; including discrimination, housing, em-

ployment and voting. The
determination of Dr. Martin Luther King and countless others at his side,
literally and figuratively
throughout the nation,
ignited change and established an advance on freedoms promised over 100
years prior,” Gordon said.
Today, he added, many of
those freedoms are often
taken for granted.
“African-Americans are
free to walk the streets of
this country without yielding the sidewalk. They
can greet a white female
publicly without the fear
of being charged with ‘eye
rape.’ We can eat in restaurants at the same time
and next to white citizens
without the owner breaking the plates on the floor
to prevent a white patron
from ever eating off them.
Furthermore, we can openly participate in the voting
process to elect ‘change
agents’ in our communities without the ludicrous
requirement to count the
number of bubbles in a bar
of soap,” Gordon said. “Local African-Americans no
longer have to be in off the
streets before dark in area
‘Sun Down Towns.’ They
no longer have to travel
with ‘Green Books,’ sandwiches, pillows and toilet
paper to address their
personal needs. They no
longer have to suppress or
hide their affection for others of another race without
the fear of being jailed or
even lynched.”
Looking back on it now,
Armstrong is amazed at
how much has changed
since 1963 in Gallia County and around the country.
“We, as a people of color,
have come so far in the last
50 years,” she said. “The
Civil Rights Act of 1964
changed lives for so many
people like nothing else has
ever done. Opportunities
that did not exist in housing, voting, education, and
jobs prior to 1964, opened
up like never before. President Obama, a black man
is currently serving a sec-

ond term as President of
the United States…the
most powerful position in
the world, on behalf of the
most powerful nation on
the face of the earth. Even
today, I still find that mind
boggling, and I frequently
think about what my parents and ancestors would
think if they were alive to
see and experience this
time in our country.”
Armstrong added that
she feels obligated to remember and honor those
who went before her and
who paved the way so that
she would have the opportunities that she has had.
“A lot of people, both
black and white literally
died for what they believed
in … a better tomorrow, a
greater society for all humankind. Too often, I think
that people think that the
struggle is over, but that
is not true. Almost daily,
there are legislative proposals to change the way/
who/where/when people
can vote. When people can
vote, no matter what their
race, creed, or color … that
is true power. Too many
people fought and died for
this right, and we need to
be very vigilant and very
concerned in this area.
Racial profiling is also a
major concern. Too many
people are being stopped,
questioned, detained, arrested, and even hurt or
killed based on their race,
ethnicity or country of origin,” Armstrong said.
In order to truly honor
Dr. King, Armstrong said
that Americans need to do
more than just name roads
and buildings after him,
they must take action.
“That is, we must encourage our young people
to get the best possible
education they can … to be
prepared academically to
make a positive difference
in the world. Stop bellyaching and complaining about
what or why something is,
or is not, like it should be
… get out there and make
a positive difference in our
neighborhoods, our com-

munities and in society,”
Armstrong said. “Young
adults must get registered
to vote, and then exercise
that right at every opportunity. They must stand up,
speak out and step forward
in making a positive contribution to the world in
which they live. It really is
true … where there’s a will,
there’s a way. Dr. King’s
life proved that.”
“Lastly, when I think of
Dr. King,” Armstrong said,
“I think of another quote
that he frequently and so
eloquently stated, he said
‘a man can’t ride your back
unless it’s bent, so stand
up and step forward.’”
Gordon explained that
he is proud of all of the
progress that has been
made, but he also sees
problems that need to
be addressed. Much has
been done to alleviate
racism in Gallia County
and southern Ohio over
the years, but racism still
persists, he said.
“As a child in the local
grade schools I learned
of ‘home-grown’ racism
early on from a female
classmate, informing me
that I couldn’t be ‘sweet’
on her white female friend
because of the color of my
skin,” Gordon said. “This
bigotry is taught to our
local children even today.
Such behavior becomes ingrained. Until the cycle is
interrupted, the behavior
will continue.”
Gordon does see times
when that cycle is broken,
and he sees how it has
opened new doors for African-Americans.

Thank You
Ray &amp; Janett Hughes
For Buying My 2013
Market Steer
Love You Mammaw &amp;
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From Cole Shadle
60445405

“In recent years, I’ve
witnessed churches and
community groups working together more frequently to address the
needs of the entire community regardless of racial
divides. Many of these efforts are due to the hearts
of individual champions
who are responding to a
higher calling and indeed
may have been influenced
by the efforts of men like
Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.,” Gordon said. “My
personal
opportunities
have included administration of several community
social service agencies
and the appointment as
the first and only AfricanAmerican City Manager
to the county seat in almost 200 years. It is a less
than frequent occasion to
see individuals of color in
positions of authority and
prominence in our region.
We have the local talent,
ripe for cultivation.”
In order to help the next
generation, Gordon believes that there needs to
be more positive role models for local children, especially those in the AfricanAmerican community.

“ Such role models
would serve to stimulate
civic ownership and responsibility, higher education or vocational attainment and aspirations of
greatness — not mediocracy. My favorite radio host,
Joe Madison, implores his
listeners to not be undervalued,
underestimated
or marginalized. We have
to teach this lesson to all
our youth, as well as ourselves,” Gordon said.
And Gordon, like Armstrong, believes strongly
that in order to bring about
more positive change, people need to take action.
“Indeed the world has
changed, but challenges
still exist in the same and
additional areas including
homelessness, incarceration, poverty and employment. These are not issues
unique to our community.
We share them with the
country, if not the world,”
Gordon said. “The issue of
fighting for justice is described as a struggle, as it
is ongoing, requiring much
of its soldiers. And like any
battle, reinforcements are
needed. You are needed.”

Thank You
for the loving prayers,
thoughts, kindness, visits, calls and
food that were extended to Gerry
during her illness and passing. She
will be sadly missed by family and
friends. Much gratitude to Pastor
Scott Baker and to the Waugh Halley
Wood Funeral Home.
The Family of Gerry Rothgeb.
60443888

From Page A1

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

OPINION

Page A4
Sunday, September 1, 2013

‘I Have a Dream’ speech — circa 1963
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
I am happy to join with you today in
what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.
Five score years ago, a great American,
in whose symbolic shadow we stand today, signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This momentous decree came as a
great beacon light of hope to millions of
Negro slaves who had been seared in the
flames of withering injustice. It came as a
joyous daybreak to end the long night of
their captivity.
But one hundred years later, the Negro
still is not free. One hundred years later,
the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled
by the manacles of segregation and the
chains of discrimination. One hundred
years later, the Negro lives on a lonely
island of poverty in the midst of a vast
ocean of material prosperity. One hundred
years later, the Negro is still languished in
the corners of American society and finds
himself an exile in his own land. And so
we’ve come here today to dramatize a
shameful condition.
In a sense we’ve come to our nation’s
capital to cash a check. When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the
Declaration of Independence, they were
signing a promissory note to which every
American was to fall heir. This note was
a promise that all men, yes, black men as
well as white men, would be guaranteed
the “unalienable Rights” of “Life, Liberty
and the pursuit of Happiness.” It is obvious today that America has defaulted
on this promissory note, insofar as her
citizens of color are concerned. Instead of
honoring this sacred obligation, America
has given the Negro people a bad check,
a check which has come back marked “insufficient funds.”
But we refuse to believe that the bank
of justice is bankrupt. We refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in
the great vaults of opportunity of this
nation. And so, we’ve come to cash this
check, a check that will give us upon
demand the riches of freedom and the
security of justice.
“I Have a Dream”
We have also come to this hallowed
spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of Now. This is no time to engage
in the luxury of cooling off or to take the
tranquilizing drug of gradualism. Now is
the time to make real the promises of democracy. Now is the time to rise from the
dark and desolate valley of segregation to
the sunlit path of racial justice. Now is the
time to lift our nation from the quicksands
of racial injustice to the solid rock of brotherhood. Now is the time to make justice a
reality for all of God’s children.
It would be fatal for the nation to overlook the urgency of the moment. This
sweltering summer of the Negro’s legitimate discontent will not pass until there
is an invigorating autumn of freedom and
equality. Nineteen sixty-three is not an
end, but a beginning. And those who hope
that the Negro needed to blow off steam
and will now be content will have a rude
awakening if the nation returns to business as usual. And there will be neither
rest nor tranquility in America until the
Negro is granted his citizenship rights.
The whirlwinds of revolt will continue to

shake the foundations of our nation until
the bright day of justice emerges.
But there is something that I must say
to my people, who stand on the warm
threshold which leads into the palace of
justice: In the process of gaining our rightful place, we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds. Let us not seek to satisfy our
thirst for freedom by drinking from the
cup of bitterness and hatred. We must
forever conduct our struggle on the high
plane of dignity and discipline. We must
not allow our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence. Again and
again, we must rise to the majestic heights
of meeting physical force with soul force.
The marvelous new militancy which
has engulfed the Negro community must
not lead us to a distrust of all white people, for many of our white brothers, as evidenced by their presence here today, have
come to realize that their destiny is tied up
with our destiny. And they have come to
realize that their freedom is inextricably
bound to our freedom.
We cannot walk alone.
And as we walk, we must make the
pledge that we shall always march ahead.
We cannot turn back.
There are those who are asking the
devotees of civil rights, “When will you
be satisfied?” We can never be satisfied
as long as the Negro is the victim of the
unspeakable horrors of police brutality.
We can never be satisfied as long as our
bodies, heavy with the fatigue of travel,
cannot gain lodging in the motels of the
highways and the hotels of the cities. We
cannot be satisfied as long as the negro’s
basic mobility is from a smaller ghetto to
a larger one. We can never be satisfied as
long as our children are stripped of their
self-hood and robbed of their dignity by
signs stating: “For Whites Only.” We cannot be satisfied as long as a Negro in Mississippi cannot vote and a Negro in New
York believes he has nothing for which
to vote. No, no, we are not satisfied, and
we will not be satisfied until “justice rolls
down like waters, and righteousness like
a mighty stream.”¹
I am not unmindful that some of you
have come here out of great trials and
tribulations. Some of you have come
fresh from narrow jail cells. And some
of you have come from areas where your
quest — quest for freedom left you battered by the storms of persecution and
staggered by the winds of police brutality. You have been the veterans of creative
suffering. Continue to work with the faith
that unearned suffering is redemptive. Go
back to Mississippi, go back to Alabama,
go back to South Carolina, go back to
Georgia, go back to Louisiana, go back to
the slums and ghettos of our northern cities, knowing that somehow this situation
can and will be changed.
Let us not wallow in the valley of despair, I say to you today, my friends.
And so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a
dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the
American dream.
I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true
meaning of its creed: “We hold these
truths to be self-evident, that all men
are created equal.”
I have a dream that one day on the red
hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves
and the sons of former slave owners will

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be able to sit down together at the table of
brotherhood.
I have a dream that one day even the
state of Mississippi, a state sweltering
with the heat of injustice, sweltering with
the heat of oppression, will be transformed
into an oasis of freedom and justice.
I have a dream that my four little
children will one day live in a nation
where they will not be judged by the
color of their skin but by the content
of their character.
I have a dream today!
I have a dream that one day, down in
Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its
governor having his lips dripping with the
words of “interposition” and “nullification” — one day right there in Alabama
little black boys and black girls will be able
to join hands with little white boys and
white girls as sisters and brothers.
I have a dream today!
I have a dream that one day every valley
shall be exalted, and every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places
will be made plain, and the crooked places
will be made straight; “and the glory of the
Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall
see it together.”
This is our hope, and this is the faith
that I go back to the South with.
With this faith, we will be able to hew
out of the mountain of despair a stone of
hope. With this faith, we will be able to
transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith, we will be able to
work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand
up for freedom together, knowing that we
will be free one day.
And this will be the day — this will be
the day when all of God’s children will be
able to sing with new meaning:
My country ‘tis of thee, sweet land of
liberty, of thee I sing.
Land where my fathers died, land of the
Pilgrim’s pride,
From every mountainside, let freedom
ring!
And if America is to be a great nation,
this must become true.
And so let freedom ring from the prodigious hilltops of New Hampshire.
Let freedom ring from the mighty
mountains of New York.
Let freedom ring from the heightening
Alleghenies of Pennsylvania.
Let freedom ring from the snow-capped
Rockies of Colorado.
Let freedom ring from the curvaceous
slopes of California.
But not only that:
Let freedom ring from Stone Mountain
of Georgia.
Let freedom ring from Lookout Mountain of Tennessee.
Let freedom ring from every hill and
molehill of Mississippi.
From every mountainside, let freedom
ring.
And when this happens, and when we
allow freedom ring, when we let it ring
from every village and every hamlet, from
every state and every city, we will be able
to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and
Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will
be able to join hands and sing in the words
of the old Negro spiritual:
Free at last! Free at last!
Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.

Letter to the Editor:
Celebrating National
Assisted Living Week
To the Editor:
National Assisted Living Week (NALW) will take
place Sept. 8 – 14, 2013, and will feature the theme
“Homemade Happiness.” The Area Agency on Aging 8 invites you — the community at large — to
join in celebrating residents’ lives and thanking volunteers, family members and staff.
Homemade Happiness celebrates the bond created by staff, residents and families as they build
warm, welcoming, and vibrant homes for residents.
Often, families who are faced with making a choice
for the care of their loved ones choose Ohio’s Assisted Living Waiver Program. The Area Agency on
Aging 8 administers the program that helps Medicaid-eligible Ohioans receive assisted living services
in a residential care facility. The services help preserve independence, as well as maintain ties to family and friends.
Ohio’s Assisted Living Waiver program pays the
costs of care in an assisted living facility for certain
people with Medicaid, allowing the consumer to
use his or her resources to cover “room and board”
expenses. Providing residential services, the Medicaid waiver program affords individuals in the region
another long-term care choice. In 2012, there were
three Assisted Living facilities in the region accepting the Waiver program.
“Homemade Happiness” and the week-long emphasis also help us to say “thank you” to our assisted living residents, many of whom have made
significant contributions to our region.
Join us and the more than 31,100 assisted living
communities nationwide who are creating celebrations for all to enjoy.
Sincerely,
Jane Skeen, LSW
AAA8 Home Care Director

Water Pressure
To the Editor;
We’re writing this letter to inform the public
that the article published Aug. 21, 2013 about the
Tuppers Plains Water District was misleading.
My wife and I have lived on Pomeroy Pike for almost 12 years. We have asked the Pomeroy Water
Department many times to get the water pressure
increased to our home. Our pressure was so low,
we often lost pressure completely for a few minutes
while taking a shower or the water would stop while
running water in the kitchen sink.
Every time we asked for the pressure increase, we
were told we had good pressure and there was nothing they could do. We went to the Tuppers-Chester
Water District Office to ask them if we could get
water service from them. They told us it would
cost a lot of money. We asked how much and after
consideration they told us it would be thousands of
dollars. We told them we would still like to get their
service because we were tired of the bad-tasting,
low-pressure Pomeroy water.
We filled out the paper work and paid the money
they got us water to our property. To let everyone
know, it was our request to get water service from
Tuppers- Chester Water District.
We now have more than twice the water pressure
we had with Pomeroy Water Service.
Thank you, Tuppers- Chester Water Department.
Sincerely,
Mr. and Mrs. James Young
Pomeroy, Ohio

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Letters should be in good taste, addressing

Fax (304) 675-5234
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�Sunday, September 1, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

%3:EF2C:6D

�62E9î$@E:46D

Bonnie M. Ross Patrick

Bonnie M. Ross Patrick, age 85, of Gallipolis,
died Thursday afternoon,
August 29, 2013, at Holzer Medical Center. Bonnie
was born April 7, 1928, in
the Bladen Community, of
Gallia County. She was the
daughter of the late Raymond and Ruth Fry Ross.
In addition to her parents,
Bonnie was preceded by
her husband, Elmer ‘Pat’
Patrick; two brothers, Joseph Ross, an infant brother; and one niece.
Bonnie was a retired phone operator for Ohio Bell, and
later worked as an operator at the Gallipolis Developmental Center. She was a member of the First Baptist Church
and a member of several clubs and organizations including, The Telephone Pioneers of American, Business and
Professional Women, Gallia County Senior Citizens, The
Gallipolis Travel Club, and the Holzer Fitness Center
‘Wrinkle Club’.
She is survived by, one son, Stephen Lee of Cincinnati;
one daughter, Patricia (Ken) Lennon of Lexington, Ky.;
three grandchildren, Alex and Ross Lennon and Katie
Lee; one sister, Mary Proffit of Gallipolis; three nieces
and one nephew.
The family would like to give special thanks to all at the
Health Center, the staff on 4 East at Holzer Medical Center, Dr. Mark Walker, Dr. Rodney Stout, and Dr. Khawaja
Hamid at Holzer Medical Center for the wonderful care
they gave Bonnie.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Sunday September 1, 2013, at the First Baptist Church with Pastors,
Alvis Pollard, Fred Williams, and David Harkleroad officiating. Burial will follow in Pine Street Cemetery. Friends
may call from 5-8 p.m. on Saturday, at the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home, and at the church on Sunday one
hour prior to services.
Pallbearers will be Mike Adams, Mark Ross, Jeff Haner,
Joe Webster, Noel Massie, Leo Valentine, Skipper Johnson, Dow Saunders, and Chris Homer.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to Holzer
Cancer Center 100 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, Ohio 45631,
or The Center for Trauma and Children, 3470 Blazer
Parkway, Lexington, KY, 40509, or the USO, PO Box
1710, Ft. Myer, Va. 22211-1101.
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halleywood.com.

Sally Aileen Caldwell

Sally Aileen Caldwell, 66, of Racine, Ohio, went to be
with the Lord on Friday, August 30, 2013, at St. Mary’s
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
She was born December 9, 1946, in Horace Cave,
Ohio, daughter of the late Roland and Audrey Torrence
of Tuppers Plains, Ohio. She was a loving mother,
grandmother and wife, and she loved spending time
with her grandchildren, being outdoors and going to
sporting events. She was also a retired employee of the

Southern Local School District, where she worked as
a kindergarten aide.
She is survived by her husband of 47 years, Jim
Caldwell; two sons, Jimmy (Christina) Caldwell of Letart Falls, and Jeff (Alisa) Caldwell of Racine; a daughter, Jodi Fisher of Racine; five very loved grandchildren,
Jesse, Xander, Katie, Ella and Connor. She is also survived by a brother-in-law, Howard (Marvene) Caldwell;
two special nephews, Troy Guthrie of Long Bottom and
Howie Caldwell of Tuppers Plains; several other nieces
and nephews; two sisters, Kathleen (Carl) Morris of Racine, and Marlene (Shepp) Shepperd; and two brothers,
Jimmy (Mary Ann) Torrence of Indiana and Paul Torrence of Florida.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by a brother, Jack Torrence; a sister, Darlene “Cookie”
Cassidy; an infant brother, Gene Torrence, and a special
niece, Tara Guthrie.
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, September
4, 2013, at Racine First Baptist Church, Racine, Ohio,
with Pastor Ryan Eaton officiating. Burial will be in the
Tuppers Plains Christian Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5-9 p.m., Tuesday, at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, Ohio, and one hour prior to the
service on Wednesday at the church.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to Racine
First Baptist Outreach Center or Southern High School
Boys Basketball, C/O Ewing Funeral Home, 106 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, OH 45769.

Donna Faye Keesee

Donna Faye Keesee, 78, of Patriot, passed away at 9:43
a.m., Thursday, August 29, 2013, in the Darst’s Personal
Care Home in Pomeroy.
Born December 17, 1934, in Clay Township of Gallia
County, she was the daughter of the late Clarence C. and
Florilla Mae Plymale Barcus.
Donna was retired from Walgreen’s Drug Company, Orlando, Florida, with over 30 years of service.
Surviving is her husband, Willard L. Keesee, who
she married June 17, 1956, in Clipper Mills, Ohio; son,
Craig Keesee of St. Cloud, Florida; granddaughter, Kylie (Ryan) Bennett of Davenport, Iowa; grandson, Kyle
Keesee of St. Cloud, Florida, great-grandson, Kylar Bennett; sisters, Lola Richards of Springfield, Virginia, Kathryn Costen of Gallipolis, Rebecca Unroe of Gallipolis,
Ernestine Mooney of Gallipolis, Addie (William) Jewell
of Columbus, Ohio, Ina Belle Sibley of Gallipolis; brothers, Ralph (Cathy) Barcus of Gallipolis and Ray Barcus of
Bidwell; sister-in-law, Alice (Don) Kuhn of Gallipolis; and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by a son, Greg Keesee; and a sister, Opal L. Barcus Halfhill.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., Tuesday, September 3, 2013, in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Officiating will be Rev. Ralph Workman. Interment will be in
the Mina Cemetery, Green Township. Friends may call
from 6-8 p.m., Monday at the chapel. Nephews will serve
as casketbearers.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting http://www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

#6:8Dî�@F?EJî�@&gt;&gt;F?:EJî�2=6?52C
The next regular meeting of the
Meigs County Agricultural Society
will be held on Monday, September 9
at 7:30 pm at the fairgrounds.

Monday, Sept. 2

LETART — The Letart Township
Trustees will meet at 5 p.m. at the
Letart Township Building.
SYRACUSE — The Sutton Township Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. at
Syracuse Village Hall.
RUTLAND — The Rutland Township Trustees will meet in regular
session on Monday September 2 at 5
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

Tuesday, Sept. 3

SYRACUSE — The Racine Area
Community Organization will be
holding their fall Basket Bingo
games at 6 p.m. at Syracuse Community. Doors will open at 5 p.m.
There will be 20 games for $20,
advanced ticket drawing, raffles,
50/50, special games, and refreshments will be served by the community center volunteers. All proceeds from the event will benefit
Star Mill Park. Tickets available
from Bev Cummins, Joyce Sisson,
Alice Wolfe and Kathryn Hart. For
information, call Hart at 949-2656.
POMEROY — Drew Webster Auxiliary Post 39 will meet at 1 p.m. at
the Legion Hall.
ALFRED — Orange Township
Trustees will meet at 7:30p.m. at the
township building on SR 681.

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî��

7 p.m. at the Courthouse.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board
meeting at 10 a.m. in Room A of
the Ross County Service Center at
475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe,
Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are held the first Thursday of
the month. For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.

Friday, Sept. 6

MARIETTA — The Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District Executive
Committee will meet at 11:30 a.m.
at 1400 Pike Street in Marietta.
For more information contact Jenny Myers at (740) 376-1026.
SALEM CENTER — Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet at 7:30 p.m.
at the Star Grange Hall. All contests
— Family Activities, Art, Photography
and Junior will be judged at that time.
All members are urged to attend.

Republican Executive Committee
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the
Courthouse. Countdown to election
day project underway.
POMEROY — Meigs County Agricultural Society will meet at 7:30
pm at the fairgrounds.

Tuesday, Sept. 10

TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
Board will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.

Thursday, Sept 12

CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
453 monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall. Refreshments served after
the meeting.

Friday, Sept. 13

SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 and Star Junior Grange #878
will meet with potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Plans for Chicken BBQ to be held on
Sunday October 6 will be made. All
members and interested persons are
invited and urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community Association will be
showing their September free movie
at 7 p.m. in the Middleport Village
Hall community room. Light refreshments will be available as well as
comfortable seating. Improvements
have been done to greatly improve
the acoustics in the former gym.
Copyright license prevents MCA
from being allowed to announce the
name of the movie but we can tell
you that it’s about the early years of a
NFL player and his adoptive family.

Sunday, Sept. 8

Saturday, Sept. 21

Saturday, Sept. 7

Coldiron

Barbara Sue Coldiron,
63, of South Point, Ohio
passed away Wednesday,
August 28, 2013 at The
Sanctuary of Ohio Valley,
Ironton, Ohio.
Funeral service will be
conducted at 2 p.m., Tuesday, September 3, 2013, at
Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio, by Pastor
James Wells. Burial will follow in Greenbottom Cemetery, Lesage, W.Va. Visitation will be held 1 p.m. to
2 p.m. Tuesday, September
3, 2013, at Hall Funeral
Home.

Fisher

Stephen B. Fisher, 64,
of Gallipolis, died on Friday, August 30, 2013, at

his residence.
In observance of his
wishes, there will be no
services. Willis Funeral
Home is assisting the
family.

Mason

Clarence Leo Mason, 84,
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
died at Abbeyshire Place
Nursing and Rehab Center
on August 29, 2013.
A graveside service will
be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, September 1, 2013,
at the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant,
with Bert Flora officiating.
Friends may visit the family from 6-8 p.m. on Saturday at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant.

Ohio program to
help drug-addicted
babies, mothers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio plans to start a program to help babies who are born addicted to drugs, as
officials look to address prescription drug abuse and opiate addiction.
About 200 mothers and babies who are addicted to
painkillers and heroin would get treatment and counseling under the $4.2 million, three-year pilot program, Gov.
John Kasich’s administration announced Thursday.
Ohio has launched efforts in recent years to crack down
on illegal prescription painkiller use and distribution, including changing guidelines for emergency room doctors
and closing clinics where doctors were improperly prescribing drugs.
Overdose drug deaths have surpassed car crashes as
the leading cause of accidental death in Ohio and several
other states.
Ohio has seen a spike in the number of drug-addicted
babies, state data shows. In 2011, Ohio had 88 cases per
10,000 live births. That’s more than six times the rate in
2004, which was 14 per 10,000 live births.
The latest program is expected to curb the costs of
specialized care for the newborns by helping the mothers get drug treatment and cutting down on the babies’
length of hospital stays in the intensive care unit.
Babies born to mothers who are addicted to painkillers or other opiates experience neonatal abstinence syndrome. Their symptoms include drug withdrawal, respiratory complications, feeding difficulties and sometimes
even seizures.
The symptoms can be uncomfortable for an adult. But for
newborns who likely have low-birth weights, the nausea and
dehydration can be life-threatening, said Dr. Mark Hurst,
medical director for the Ohio Department of Mental Health
and Addiction Services.
Caring for the drug-addicted newborns and mothers,
who are often on Medicaid, can be costly to the system.
Health care expenses associated with treating babies with
neonatal abstinence syndrome topped $70 million in 2011,
according to the Ohio Hospital Association. There were
roughly five hospital admissions per day in 2011. And the
average length of a hospital stay for newborns with the syndrome is between 14 and 20 days.
Expectant mothers in the state’s new program would undergo a combination of counseling and medication-assisted
treatment for their addictions, along with additional help
to prevent relapses after the babies are born.
“By these women being in treatment and receiving medication-assisted therapy, we know what they’re taking,”
Hurst said. “And we can appropriately treat the children for
withdrawal. And that in and of itself decreases the hospital
stay by about 30 percent.”
State officials are using a combination of federal
and Ohio dollars to pay for the pilot. They expect to
save about $1.8 million from the reduction of hospital
time for the infants.
Hurst said most of the mothers have tenuous housing
arrangements and lack a good support system for recovery.

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POMEROY — The Veterans Memorial Hospital employees will have
their annual reunion from 1 to 3 p.m.
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) — A young Ohio woman found
Wednesday, Sept. 4
at the Meigs Community Center. shot dead in her car was 5 months pregnant, and her
CHESTER — The Chester Garden
Joyce Redman and Barbara Fry are in 14-month-old daughter is in critical condition with a gunClub will hold its annual open meetshot wound to the head, authorities and family members
charge of this year’s reunion.
ing at 7:30 p.m. at Chester Methodsaid Friday.
ist Church. Guests are invited. There
In a short news release about the Wednesday night
Friday,
Sept.
27
will be door prizes and refreshments.
MIDDLEPORT — Health Recov- death of Brittany Stykes, 22, the Brown County Sheriff’s
HARRISONVILLE — The Scipio
ery Services will be hosting an open Office did not include a potential motive, and sheriff’s ofTownship Trustees will hold their
house in honor of National Recovery ficials did not return repeated calls for comment Thursregular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
Month. The open house will take day and Friday.
the Harrisonville Fire House.
Authorities responded to a call Wednesday night about
place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with
door prizes, food and fun. Health a single-vehicle crash on State Route 68 north of Ripley,
Thursday, Sept. 5
Recovery Services is located at 138 about 45 miles southeast of Cincinnati.
CHESTER — Chester-Shade
Monday, Sept. 9
When they arrived, they found Stykes dead from
POMEROY — Meigs County North Second Avenue in Middleport.
Historical Associatiion will meet at
gunshot wounds. Her baby daughter, Aubree, was
still strapped in her car seat, bleeding from a gunshot
wound to the head.
Stykes’ aunt, Brenda Pack, cried as she told The Associated Press on Friday that her niece was 5 months
WASHINGTON (AP) dimming hopes for im- request a pardon and am- of subversion. He was re- pregnant.
“She was a good girl and she was a great mother,” Pack
— North Korea has re- proved relations already nesty for Kenneth Bae, cently hospitalized.
said.
“There’s going to be a hole in this family.”
scinded its invitation strained by the North’s and return the next day.
Department
spokesShe
said Stykes’ 14-month-old daughter, Aubree, was
for a senior U.S. envoy nuclear program.
Bae, a 45-year-old tour woman Marie Harf said
in critical condition but “holding her own” and “making
to travel to Pyongyang
Bob King, the U.S. spe- operator and Christian the U.S. was “surprised little improvements” at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
to seek the release of cial envoy for North Ko- missionary, was sentenced and
disappointed
by
Stykes’ mother, Mary Dodson, told WKRC-TV that the
a detained American, rean human rights, was in April to 15 years of hard North Korea’s decision” family has no idea why someone would have shot her.
the State Department due to travel Friday from labor by the authoritarian and remains gravely con“She was on her way home and somebody shot them
said Friday, abruptly Tokyo to Pyongyang to state, which accused him cerned about Bae’s health. while they were driving. That’s all we know,” she said.
REEDSVILLE — The Reedsville
Neighborhood Community Picnic
will be held at the Belleville Locks
and Dam Shelter House. The Belleville Locks and Dam is located on
State Route 124 in Reedville Ohio.
There will be a free dinner and
drinks provided. Along with music
provided by George Hall. The picnic
starts at 1 p.m. Everyone is invited
to attend this free event. Come out
and enjoy great food, great music
with your neighbors.

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Sunday, September 1, 2013

Civil War artifacts on exhibit at Marietta Museum #6:8Dî�@ î"@42=î�C:67D
MARIETTA — Naval artifacts
from the Civil War are hard to find
and for that reason the public rarely
has an opportunity to view any.
However, The Friends of the
Museums along with the Sons and
Daughters of the Pioneer Rivermen
have arranged for a display and will
be hosting a two-day exhibit at the
Campus Martius Museum. It will
be open to the public from 9:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept.
14, and from noon to 3 p.m. on Sun-

day, Sept. 15. The regular museum
admission will be charged.
Mixed with the Navy items will be
civilian wares and army items that were
known to have been used in the war.
The Army Navy Expedition of the
Mississippi features Civil War artifacts from both the Army and Navy,
as well as 1/4 inch scale models of
boats used by the Union to successfully control the Mississippi River
and its tributaries in 1862.
Among the naval artifacts in the

exhibit are an Ames 1846 box-lock
pistol, the first weapon designed with
the sailor in mind, an Ames gold-gilded officer’s belt buck, and relics from
the ironclad the USS Cairo (sunk in
1862 and recovered in 1963). The
exhibit also includes numerous Army
artifacts as well as civilian wares.
For more information on the upcoming exhibit call Campus Martius Museum , 740-373-3750, or
visit the website http://www.campusmartiusmuseum.org.

New orthopedic surgeon joins O’Bleness affiliate
ATHENS — After completing
a sports medicine fellowship at
the Cleveland Clinic, Dr. Sergio
A. Ulloa, explored employment
opportunities in cities big and
small throughout the country, but
Athens kept calling him home.
The orthopedic surgeon returned to his roots when he recently joined Athens Medical
Associates, the multispecialty
physician group affiliated with
O’Bleness Health System. He
is scheduled to open an Orthopedic Sports Medicine practice
Sept. 9 in Suite 350 of the Castrop Center.
The son of Ohio University
physics and astronomy professor Sergio E. Ulloa, Dr. Ulloa is a
graduate of Athens High School,
Ohio University and Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine. He completed
his residency at Summa Western
Reserve Hospital in Cuyahoga
Falls, Ohio, where he was twice
named outstanding resident and
served as chief resident, before
beginning his one-year fellowship
at the Cleveland Clinic.
“I grew up in Athens and
loved it,” Ulloa said. “I visited many wonderful practice
groups in several states, but
there was always something
missing. Since I was comparing
every place I visited to Athens,
I thought maybe I should be
looking here to start my professional career. The move back to
Athens seemed obvious to me.”
Ulloa specializes in the diagnosis and treatment — nonoperative and operative — of
acute and chronic conditions of

the joints, muscles and bones
caused by injury, overuse and
degenerative diseases such as
arthritis. His training includes
arthroscopic surgery of the
hips, knees (including ACL reconstruction), and shoulder
(rotator cuff repair); joint reconstruction; and fracture care,
among other procedures.
He developed an interest in
orthopedics and sports medicine while a standout soccer
player at Athens High School.
During his fellowship at the
Cleveland Clinic, he served as
assistant team physician for
Cleveland’s professional sports
teams — the Browns, Indians and Cavaliers. He went to
spring training with the Indians and attended the National
Football League Scouting Combine in Indianapolis.
“Not
many
orthopedics
sports medicine fellowships
offer physicians the chance to
work with major-league teams
in three different professional
sports,” Ulloa said. “Treating
high level athletes allows me
to help people of all ages and
skill level type with education
and surgical or non-surgical options. My goals are to get people back to the activities they
enjoy in the most minimallyinvasive way possible and help
athletes of all ages and skill levels take advantage of the benefits of sports participation.”
Ulloa, 34, and his wife Dr.
Katherine Hutchison-Ulloa, a
family practice physician, are
the parents of three children,
ages three, two and 10 months.

Car, Truck and
Motorcycle Show
Benefit

POMEROY — The
Home National Bank is
sponsoring a car, truck and
motorcycle show on the
Pomeroy Parking lot Saturday to raise money for
the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center Meals on
Wheels program. Registration will be held from 9
a.m. to noon with a trophy
awards ceremony at 3:30
p.m. Chicken noodle dinners, pizzas, and hot dogs
and hamburgers will be for
sale during the event.

Reception Planned

SYRACUSE — Syracuse Postmaster John
Henderson will be honored at a reception to be
held from 12 - 2 p.m. on
Saturday, Sept. 7, at Syracuse Community Center.
Refreshments will be served.
Everyone is welcome.

Office Closed

Dr. Sergio A. Ulloa

Ulloa enjoys biking, swimming
and plays adult-league soccer.
As an Athens native, he looks
forward to seeing familiar faces
in his practice.
“The fact that Dr. Ulloa
chose to practice here speaks
favorably about the quality of
our health-care system and
his commitment to the community,” said Mark Rothstein,
MD, Senior Vice President and
Executive Director of Athens
Medical Associates. “We are
very pleased to have recruited
him. He has received some of
the best training in the world
at the Cleveland Clinic. He
will be joining an already outstanding orthopedic service at
O’Bleness Health System.

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will be closed on
Monday, Sept. 2 in observance of Labor Day. Normal business hours will resume at 8 a.m. on Sept. 3.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County TB Clinic will
be closed on Monday, Sept.
2 in observance of Labor
Day, therefore tests will not
be given on Friday, Aug. 30.

Southern Open
House

RACINE — Open house
for elementary and high
school students is scheduled for 4-7 p.m. on Sept. 3.
Pre-School Orientation
will be during the regular
school day Friday, Sept.
6. Students and parents
can come to meet the preschool staff at this time in
preparation for Pre-School
which begins Sept. 9.

Immunization Clinic

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on

Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.

Traffic Advisory

MEIGS COUNTY —
County Road 46, Success
Road, will be closed for
approximately one week
beginning Sept. 3. County
forces will be replacing a
bridge at a site 1/2 mile
east of Ohio 7.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Road 10
(Carpenter Hill Road)
will be closed for approximately one month beginning July 29. County
forces will be replacing a
culvert with a new bridge
on County Road 10 at a
site approximately 2,000
feet north of County
Road 17 (Cotterill Road).
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just 0.25
miles south of State Farm
Road) will be reduced to
one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. During construction
there will be a 10’ width
restriction. Traffic will be
maintained with a portable
traffic light. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio
143 will be open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 124 (located 0.4
miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers.
Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 124 will reopen August 31, 2013.

Medicaid
expansion
backers eye
ballot effort

Athens Medical Associates
60446527

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Backers of Medicaid expansion have started gathering initial signatures in
an effort that could put the
idea before Ohio voters if
the Republican-controlled
Legislature fails to act.
A formal announcement about the campaign
and its players is expected to come next week,
Jon Allison of the Ohio
Alliance for Health Transformation said Friday.
State lawmakers have
been trying to find common ground on whether
to expand Medicaid health
coverage to more low-income people since Republican Gov. John Kasich proposed an extension of the
program in February. GOP
leaders pulled it from the
state budget, and the issue
has yet to gain traction.
The House speaker recently said his chamber
wouldn’t be ready to take
any action on Medicaid
by October, but more
likely by year’s end.
Allison’s broad coalition
of Ohio hospitals, business
groups, consumer advocates and religious organizations supports Medicaid
expansion, as does AARP
Ohio. And they’re focused
on get state lawmakers to
approve the program’s extension, Allison said.
“Legislative action to
authorize Medicaid expansion remains the No.
1 priority,” he said in a
phone interview.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

INSIDE

SPORTS

SUNDAY,
SEPTEMBER 1, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

Eastern rolls past
Lady Rebels... B2

Bulldogs bite Gallia Academy, 62-19
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia
Academy led 7-0 after Logan Allison
returned the opening kickoff for a
touchdown, unfortunately for the Blue
Devils it was all down hill from there.
Visiting Athens compiled 492 total yards on its way to a 62-19 victory over Gallia Academy, Friday
night at Memorial Field.
The Bulldogs (1-0) answered Allison’s kickoff return with a 3:04,
eight-play drive that was capped
off by a Trae Williams five yard
touchdown run. The snap was low
on the extra-point attempt and
AHS sophomore Heath Wiseman
ran it in for two to give Athens the
lead. Williams found paydirt again,
this time from one yard out, after
a 1:05, five-play drive. Athens led
15-7 after one period of play.
The Blue Devils (0-1) were
pinned deep in their own territory
near the start of the second after

forcing a turnover on downs at the
GAHS eight yard line. A fumble on
a pass reception that was recovered
by AHS set the Bulldogs up just
one yard from another score. Junior
quarterback Joe Burrow completed
a pass to Adam Luehrman for to put
the Green and Gold up 21-7.
Gallia Academy’s next drive took
over five minutes off the clock and
the Blue Devils earned their first
three first downs of the game. However GAHS failed to convert on
fourth down and Athens regain possession at the Bluudog 38.
A pair of connections from Burrow to Zacciah Saltzman set the
Bulldogs up to score again, and
once again it was Williams punching it in from one yard out. Gallia
Academy had another long drive
ended by downs and the Bulldogs
claimed a 27-7 halftime advantage.
The Blue Devils forced AHS to
punt on its first drive of the second
half and GAHS took possession at its
own 19 yard line. A 50 yard connec-

tion from Wade Jarrell to Wes Jarrell
put the Blue Devils inside the red
zone for the first time in the game.
GAHS fell victim to another fumble
and the Bulldogs regained possesion
on their own seven yard line.
The ensuing Athens drive was
halted when Allison picked off
Burrow and retured it to the AHS
13 yard line. It took four plays
from there and Wade Jarrell gave
the home fans something to cheer
about, as he powered through the
line for six points.
The home side wasn’t cheering for
long however, as on the Athens next
play from scrimmage Williams ran 65
yards for the touchdown.
The Blue Devils showed they have
some big plays up their selves as well
on the ensuing drive, as Wade Jarrell
completed a pass over the middle to
Allison that senior took 83 yards to
Alex Hawley | Daily Tribune
the endzone. Gallia Academy was Gallia Academy senior Logan Allison (4), led by GAHS sophodown 35-19 with 3:18 remaining in more Wes Jarrell (2), returns the opening kick for a touchdown during the Blue Devils 62-19 loss to Athens, Friday night

See BULLDOGS | B2 at Memorial Field in the Old French City.

Tony Shotsky photo | Southernohiosportsphotos.com

Bryan Walters | Daily Tribune

Southern senior running back Tyler Barton (11) bullies his
way past River Valley defender Kirk Morrow during the first
half of Friday night’s Week 1 non-conference football game
in Bidwell, Ohio.

Tornadoes topple
River Valley, 31-0
J.P. Davis

Special to OVP

BIDWELL, Ohio — For the first time in five years,
the River Valley Raiders lost their season opener to the
Southern Tornadoes to the final score of 31-0. The visiting Tornadoes came into Raider Stadium with a vengeance from suffering a tough loss the previous season
to River Valley at Racine with a final 13-12.
The Raiders (0-1) — playing in front of the home
crowd for the first time this season — found themselves
in a scoreless drought throughout the game. The Raiders
fought courageously against Southern for the entire game
and kept their heads held high from kickoff to the last possession of the ball game.
The Raiders had to punt the ball on their first drive,
while the Tornadoes used their running attack and scored
a touchdown on their opening drive.
Southern’s Tyler Barton scored the first touchdown
of the Tornadoes’ season with a 24-yard pass from
Tristen Wolfe. After the failed point after touchdown
(PAT), the Tornadoes was ahead of the Raiders 6-0
and they never looked back.
The positive outlook for the Raiders in the first quarter
was the interception reception by Austin Bradley in the
end zone for the Raiders from Southern’s Tristen Wolfe.
See TORNADOES | B2

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, Sept. 3

Volleyball
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Rock Hill at River Valley, 5:30
Cross Country
Meigs, River Valley, Southern at Gallia Academy 5 p.m.
Golf
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
Meigs at Meigs County Golf Course, 4 p.m.
Point Pleasant, Fairland at River Valley, 4 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Belpre, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 4

Volleyball
Miller at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Golf
River Valley, Coal Grove at Rock Hill, 4 p.m.
Meigs girls at Wellston, 4 p.m.
See SCHEDULE | B2

Meigs senior Jordan Hutton (11) breaks away from the Coal Grove defense during a second half run Friday night in a
Week 1 non-conference football contest in Coal Grove, Ohio.

Marauders rally past Coal Grove, 46-44
Dave Harris
Special to OVP

COAL GROVE, Ohio — In a
game that will be talked about for
years to come, the Meigs Marauders
erased a 12 point deficit in the final
four minutes of the game to post a
thrilling 46-44 come from behind
win over Coal Grove Friday evening.
The Hornets looked to put the
game away with 4:41 left when
Conor Markins pulled in a 57 yard
touchdown pass from Jesse Rigsby,
Rigsby added the extra points for a
44-32 advantage. But two Andrew
Burt touchdowns, the final with
1:41 left in the contest and Burt’s
run for the extra points gave the
Marauders the thrilling win.
The Marauder defense came up
with the games first big play when
Rigsby fumbled at the Meigs nine
yard line and Daylen Neece recovered for the Marauders. Mixing up
the pass and run Meigs went in for
the first score when Damon Jones
pulled in a 12 yard scoring toss from
Kalieb Sheets. The extra points were
no good but Meigs had drawn first
blood with 1:42 in the first.
On the first play after the kickoff Rigsby hit Joe Akers from 50
yards out to tie the game at six.
Tanner Murphy one yard run and,
Murphy’s extra point run with
8:35 left in the first half gave the
Hornets the lead at 14-6.
Michael Davis, who had a monster game for the Marauders, re-

turned the kickoff 45 yards to give
the Marauders good field position.
Three plays later Ty Phelps pulled
in a 45 yard scoring toss from
Sheet, Burt added the extra points
to tie the game at 14 with 7:47 left.
After Isaiah Gunther scored from
two yards out and Rigsby added the
extra points to make it 22-14, once
again the Davis sparked the Marauders returning the kick 37 yards
to the Hornet 45. Three plays later,
Davis pulled in a 29-yard pass from
Sheets, the extra points was no
good and the half ended with Coal
Grove on top 22-20.
Davis returned the second half
kickoff 49 yards, setting up a five
play drive that gave the Marauders
the lead when Sheets went around
left end 36 yards for the score and
the Marauders went on top 26-22.
Murphy added a 40 yard run in the
third period, and Gunther added a 12
yard run with 5:42 left in the third for
a 36-26 with 5:42 left. But once again
Davis came up with the big play
breaking off a 59 yard touchdown run
with 4:40 remaining and the Marauders had cut the Hornet lead to 36-32.
Markins pulled in a 57 yard
pass from Rigsby and when Rigsby added the extra points the Hornets look to have a comfortable
44-32 lead 4:41 remaining. But
once again the Marauders refused
to quit. Davis returned the kickoff
25 yards and added a run of 30
yards on first down.
Meigs drove to the Hornet 22, on
third and seven, Sheets was unable

to find anyone open and rambled
down the left sideline for 19 yards to
the Hornet three. One the next play
Burt plowed through the line for the
score. And Meigs had cut the lead to
44-38 with 3:21 remaining.
Instead of going for the onside
kick the Marauders kicked deep
and Coal Grove took over at their
own five yard line. Meigs defense
stiffened and forced them Hornets to a three and out and Austin
Welch returned the Coal Grove
punt 17 yards to the 15 yard line.
After a Hornet penalty, Burt ran
for seven and then the final three
yards to tie the game at 44 with
1:41 left. Burt then scored the winning points and plowed through
the line for the extra points.
A Hornet holding penalty put
the host team deep in a whole
and facing a fourth and 34, Coal
Grove had one last chance when
Rigsby pass to Gunther was well
short of the first down. Two
snaps and Meigs taking the knee
ran out the clock and gave the
Marauders the exciting win.
Michael Davis had a huge game
for the Marauders with 344 total yards, 133 of it coming on the
ground in 11 tries. Sheets added
112 in 11 carries and Burt added
42 in 11 tires. Sheets was 11 of
23 in the air for 168 yards, Phelps
caught six for 86, Davis two for 43,
and Jones two for 22.
For the Hornets Gunther led the
See MARAUDERS | B2

Vikings blank Eastern in opener, 20-0
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Two
early turnovers allowed Symmes Valley to take an early 14-0 lead, and
visiting Eastern ultimately never recovered Friday night during a 20-0
setback in a Week 1 non-conference
football matchup in Lawrence County.
The Eagles (0-1) fumbled at that
own 40-yard line late in the first quarter, and the host Vikings (1-0) turned
that miscue into points moments later
when Tanner Mays plunged in from
two yards out for a 6-0 edge with 2:25
remaining in the first quarter.
On the ensuing drive, EHS fumbled again — and SVHS recovered

the loose ball at the Eastern 32.
Five plays later, Tyler Rowe pounded his way into the endzone for a
12-0 advantage with 1:03 left in the
opening stanza. Rowe added a successful two-point conversion run to
make it a 14-0 contest.
The Vikings wrapped up the scoring early in the second period after
Mays rumbled in from nine yards
out, giving the hosts a 20-0 cushion
with 7:38 remaining in the half. Neither team scored the rest of the way,
allowing SVHS to wrap up the three
possession outcome.
The Eagles amassed 101 rushing yards on 34 carries and finished
the night with 159 yards of total offense. The guests committed three

turnovers and were penalized seven
times for 52 yards.
SVHS, conversely, accumulated
245 rushing yards on 49 attempts
and ended the game with 308 total
yards of offense. The Vikings had just
one turnover and were flagged three
times for 34 yards.
Symmes Valley gained a small 1413 edge in first downs and punted
three times for an average of 31
yards, compared to a 26.2 yard average on four punts by EHS.
Zack Scowden led the Eastern
rushing attack with 60 yards on
12 carries. Dylan Bresciani was
next with 32 yards on six tries,
See VIKINGS | B2

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

� îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Eastern rolls past Lady Rebels
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — It
was another flying start for the Eastern volleyball Thursday night, as the
Lady Eagles picked up their 37th
consecutive Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division decision with a 259, 25-17, 25-14 victory over visiting
South Gallia in the league opener for
both programs.
The Lady Eagles (3-0, 1-0 TVC
Hocking) began defense of their
back-to-back league crowns in style,
as the hosts led wire to wire in Game
1 and never trailed by more than
three points in the entire contest.
The Lady Rebels (1-2, 0-1) led 2-0
in Game 2 and 7-4 in the finale, but
EHS respectively rallied with runs
of 25-15 and 21-7 to wrap up the 3-0
match decision.
Eastern led 6-0 to start Game 1
before SGHS scored to pull within

five, which was as close as the guests
would get in the opener. The Lady
Eagles’ biggest lead of the night
also came in Game 1 with the final
16-point margin of victory.
After falling behind 2-0 in Game
2, the hosts reeled off seven straight
points en route to a 16-6 advantage.
The Lady Rebels whittled that lead
down to three at 17-14, but EHS
closed the game with an 8-3 spurt to
take a 2-0 edge in the match.
The Lady Eagles led 4-1 early on in
the finale, but the guests responded
with six straight points to claim their
largest lead of the night at 7-4. Eastern rallied to knot things up at seven,
then both teams traded leads before
ending up deadlocked at nine.
EHS recaptured the lead for good
at 10-9, but never led by more than
four points en route to a small 1714 cushion. Katie Keller served up
the final eight points of the contest,

Marauders
From Page B1
way with 81 yards in 20
carries, Murphy added 53
in 10 tries. Rigsby had an
outstanding game for the
home team throwing for
352 yards completing 13 of

allowing EHS to pick up its third
consecutive straight-game triumph
of the young season.
Katie Keller led the hosts with 16
service points, followed by Jordan
Parker with 12 points and Kelsey
Johnson with 11 points. Sabra Bailey and Erin Swatzel rounded out
the service scoring with six and
three points, respectively.
Parker led the net attack with 11
kills, followed by Swatzel with nine
kills and a game-high four blocks.
Rigsby and Johnson also chipped in
eight and five kills, respectively.
Bailey dished out a team best 35
assists. Rigsby and Parker respectively came away with 27 and 23
digs in the triumph.
Shelby Sanders led the Lady
Rebels with six service points, followed by Alicia Hornsby with two
points. Brynn Adams and Sara Bailey also chipped in a point apiece
to the losing cause.

Bryan Walters/photo

The Eastern duo of Erin Swatzel (33) and Kelsey Johnson (22)
block a spike attempt towards South Gallia’s Sara Bailey (24)
during Thursday night’s TVC Hocking volleyball contest in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Vikings
19. Joe Akers caught three
passes for 152 yards and
Markins caught three for
109 yards.
Meigs (1-0) will make its
second trip to Lawrence
County in a row next Friday
when it travels to Fairland.

From Page B1
while Daschle Facemyer had 22
yards on five attempts.
Bresciani finished the night 5-of24 passing for 79 yards, which included one interception. Facemyer
hauled in a team-high two passes for

Schedule

43 yards, while Christian Speelman
added a catch of 29 yards.
Tyler Rowe led the hosts with 103
rushing yards on 11 carries. Collin
Webb added 46 yards on seven tries,
while Brandon Craft contributed 38
yards on eight totes.
Tanner Mays ran 10 times for 27

yards and went 2-of-5 passing for 63
yards, throwing one interception.
Cameron Meadows hauled in both receptions for 63 yards.
Eastern returns to action Friday
when it opens TVC Hocking play with
a Week 2 matchup at Miller. Kickoff is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

Tornadoes

From Page B1

Thursday, Sept. 5

Volleyball
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5:30
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Waterford at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton St. Joe,
5:30
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Golf
SEOAL at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Meigs, 4:30
Eastern, Waterford at South Gallia, 4:30
Wahama, Belpre at Southern, 4:30

Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Williamstown, 5 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 6

Football
Rock Hill at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Southern at South Gallia, 7:30
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Adena at River Valley, 7:30
Meigs at Fairland, 7:30
Eastern at Miller, 7:30
Volleyball
Hannan at Calvary Baptist, 6 p.m.

With a Certified
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From Page B1
Within 72 seconds into the second quarter, River Valley had a fumble and Southern capitalized the turnover with a 5-yard
touchdown run by Tyler Barton.
Five minutes later into the second quarter, Southern had a 12-yard touchdown
run by Paul Ramthun and with the failed
PAT kick, the Tornadoes were up 18-0 to
the Raiders. With 2:27 left in the first half,
the Tornadoes scored another touchdown
with a 19-yard run by Tristen Wolfe and a
successful PAT kick, Southern’s lead was
25-0 going into halftime.
In the third quarter, River Valley and
Southern walked away with no scores
and two turnovers altogether. Southern
walked away in the third quarter with fivefirst downs, while River Valley had onefirst down. At the end of the third quarter,
Southern continues with the lead of 25-0.
With five seconds into the start of the
fourth quarter, Tyler Barton of Southern carried a 13-yard touchdown run and an unsuccessful PAT kick, the Tornadoes stretched
the lead to later became the final score of
31-0. After the Tornadoes touchdown in the
beginning of the fourth quarter, Southern
had a forced fumble, while River Valley gave
up a forced fumble and loss of downs to end
the ball game with an overall score of 31-0 in
favor of the Tornadoes.
River Valley’s Tyler Twyman was 0-for-1
passing for zero yards. Austin Bradley led
the Raiders with 15 carries for a total of
59 rushing yards.
Josh Campbell had 14 carries for 44

yards and Twyman had four carries for
18 yards. Dustin Bickers had two carries
for two yards and Tyler Ward added one
carry for four yards.
Jaykob Mabe had 1 carry for 1 yard.
The Raiders had a total rushing of 39
carries for 128 yards. The Raiders had
seven first downs for the game, five
penalties for 45 yards and three fumbles, two of which were lost.
Southern’s Tristen Wolfe led the Tornadoes with 5-of-7 passing for 51 yards,
including one TD and one interception.
Tyler Barton led the Tornadoes in rushing with 21 carries for 151 yards and two
touchdowns. Paul Ramthun had 12 carries
for 76 yards and one touchdown.
Ryan Billingsley had five carries for 40
yards and Tristen Wolfe had six carries
for 24 yards and one touchdown. Trenton
Deem had two carries for one yard.
Zac Beegle had one carry for five yards.
The Tornadoes had a total rushing of 47
carries for 287 yards. Tyler Barton led the
Tornadoes in receiving of two receptions
for 31 yards and one touchdown.
Ryan Billingsley had two receptions for
25 yards. Hunter Johnson had one reception for negative five yards. The Tornadoes had a total receiving of five receptions for 51 yards. The Tornadoes had 15
first downs for the game, six penalties for
45 yards and three turnovers.
The Raiders (0-1) return to action next
Friday when they host Adena. Southern
(1-0) returns to the gridiron when it travels to South Gallia for the TVC Hocking
opener for both teams.

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the third quarter.
Athens again answered
with a 2:35, nine-play
drive that ended with a
one-yard touchdown run
by Williams, his fourth
score of the game.
The Blue Devils net drive
was stopped short when
Ryan Luehrman picked off
Wade Jarrell’s pass and
took it for a touchdown
with one second remaining
in the third period.
The Bulldogs grabbed
another pick-six on the
next GAHS drive, this time
it was senior Alex Goldsberry intercepting the pass
and taking it back for the
touchdown.
After forcing GAHS to
turn the ball over on downs
Athens scored for the final
time on a Dahotah Mcfee
71 yard run. The kick by
Patrick Thomas was good
and the Green and Gold
claimed the 62-19 victory
over the defending Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League Champions.
“That’s a very good football program and we knew
coming in it was going to
be a shootout,” said first
year GAHS coach Wade
Bartholomew. “We never
got our offense to click fast
enough, even though there
late it looked like we did it
was more desperation.
“They brought the game
to us early,” Bartholomew
commented. “They maintained their blocks and
stayed with them, where
as we were kind of one hit
wonders. We hit them and
just stopped and we have
to work on that this week.”
Wade Jarrell was 15-of-

35 passing for 230 yards
with a pair of interceptions in the game for the
Blue Devils. Jarrell also
led the GAHS rushing attack with 67 yards on 21
carries with a touchdown.
Eric Ward finished with
nine yards on four carries,
Wes Jarrell marked eight
yards on one rush, Allison
carried the ball twice for
four yards, while Eli Miller
had one rush for two yards.
Allison led the Blue
Devils receiving with
eight catches for 132
yards and a touchdown.
Wes Jarrell finished wiht
five grabs for 75 yards,
Devin Henry caught one
pass for 22 yards, while
Reid Eastman caught one
pass for one yard.
Burrow was 14-of-21
passing with 165 yards, an
interception and a touchdown for the victors. The
Athens gound game was
led by Williams with 180
yards on 19 carries with
four scores. Mcfee rushed
10 times for 123 yards
and a TD, Burrow carried the ball seven times
for 15 yards, while Wiseman rounded out the AHS
rushing total with nine
yards on two attempts.
Saltzman led the Bulldogs with four catches for
71 yards, followed by Wiseman with four catches for
27 yards. Adam Leuhrman
caught three passes for 21
yards and score, while Ryan
Leuhrman caught two passes for 21 yards.
“We have to try to put
this game behind us,” said
Bartholomew. “I think this
summer we had a little bit

of a cocky swag and tonight
it got smacked in the face.
I think we’re going to learn
from that and come back.”
Athens held a 20-16 advantage in first downs, and
a 492-302 advantage in total yards. The Blue Devils
were penalized eight times
for 49 yards, while Athens
was flagged 10 times for
65 yards. GAHS held a 68to-59 advantage in plays
ran. The Bulldogs fumbled
twice but lost neither,
while Gallia Academy lost
two of its three fumbles.
Athens forced eight turnovers in the game, while
committing only two.
Athens has now won 10
consecutive regular season
games. The Bulldogs have
won in each of their last
three trips to Memorial
Field. The home team has
lost six times in a row in
this series. Athens is now
8-5 against the SEOAL
since leaving the league
following the 2007 season.
In its last 14 games against
the Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division the Blue
Devils are now 11-3.
It was a rough Friday
all over for the SEOAL as
Logan fell to Lancaster
57-7 and Portsmouth lost
to Lucasville Valley 2819. Jackson and Warren
both play on Saturday
night in week one.
It was also a rough
night for Gallia Academy’s next opponent, as
Rock Hill lost to Minford
40-6. The Blue Devils will
host the Redmen Friday
night at Memorial field in
the second game of their
four game home stand to
open the season.

�Sunday, September 1, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî�

Point Pleasant tames Cougars in opener, 70-14
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

-9:E6î�2=4@?DîD@2CîA2DEî
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Gary Clark

Special to OVP

MASON, W.Va. — Although the final outcome may
have emerged as expected the ease of the victory
proved to be a little surprising as Coach Ed Cromley’s
Wahama White Falcon football eleven had no trouble
at all in securing a season opening 60-26 gridiron win
over the visiting Fayetteville Pirates.
Kane Roush and Colton Neal scored three touchdowns
apiece with Hunter Bradley running for one and throwing
for another as the Bend Area team had minor difficulty
in winning its 32nd consecutive regular season contest.
Wyatt Wooten and Brandon Stewart also added touchdown runs for the White Falcons with Billy Joe McDermitt booting six of nine PAT kicks in the WHS triumph.
Roush finished the night with 134 yards rushing in 10
carries while scoring on first half runs of 16 and 57 yards.
Roush also picked off a Pirate pass and returned the pigskin 38 yards for six points.
Neal enjoyed an equally impressive outing with touchdown
runs of 53 and 30 yards in addition to snaring a 46 yard scoring pass from Bradley. Neal rambled 53 yards through the
middle on the game’s opening offensive play for the Falcons’
initial score and Wahama never looked back.
Bradley also experienced a successful beginning to his
Falcon football career with a touchdown pass and six pass
completions in seven tries for 99 yards. He was picked off
once during the contest.
Wahama scored at least two times in all four quarters
and finished with 474 yards of total offense with 374 yards
rushing and another 100 yards through the air.
Fayetteville added two scores in each of the final two periods and completed the outing with 374 yards of total offense. The Pirates were limited to just 91 yards offensively
in the opening two quarters before taking advantage of the
inexperienced Falcon reserves during second half action.
A pair of scores by Roush and another by Neal with
the point after boots by McDermitt provided WHS with
a comfortable 20-0 edge after the game’s first 12 minutes.
Another touchdown by Neal and one by Bradley upped the
lead to 33-0 at the half before Neal’s 30 yard run in the third
quarter all but put the game away. The two opponents traded scorers throughout the remainder of the contest.
Roush, Wooten and Stewart crossed the goal line for
Wahama with William Fenton tossing a pair of TD passes
to Dalton Dempsey in addition to a five yard run by Tasheem Saunders accounting for the Pirates point total.
Saunders enjoyed a game high 138 yards on the ground
and another 44 yards receiving for Fayetteville with Fenton connecting on 13 of 19 passes for 166 yards and two
touchdowns. Roush and Garrett Miller picked off Fenton
offerings during the outing for the White Falcons with
Dempsey intercepting a Falcon offering in the affair.
The season opening victory by the White Falcons
now sets the stage for a battle with Trimble next week
in what has become the battle for the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division.
The Tomcats will visit Bachtel Stadium in Mason next
Friday night in what many consider the game of the year
for both teams. Kickoff time is set for 7:30 pm. Fayetteville
will travel to Midland Trail in search of its first victory.

Varsity golf teams play a
non-conference tri-match
Staff Report

Special to OVP

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — A very warm Thursday evening
found the varsity golf teams from Wahama, River Valley
and Point Pleasant playing a non-conference tri-match at
Cliffside Golf Course. The weather may have contributed
to one player withdrawing from the match and another
finished the 9-hole, play six, count four format.
The White Falcons lost Michael MacKnight after 4 holes
and Kelsey Allbright from Point Pleasant did not feel well
from the start but was able to complete her round. Wahama also played without the services of senior veteran
Michael Hendricks absent because of a prior commitment.
However, when all the scoring was tallied, the White Falcons managed to post a winning total of 190. River Valley
finished in the second spot with a total of 200, while the
Big Blacks came in third with a score of 205.
The best score for the winning team was posted by
Mason Hicks with a 44. Nathan Redman carded a 46
and Nolan Pierce shot a 47. The 4th score that counted
for Wahama was a 53 by Benjamin Foreman. Kyle Sines
also played for the White Falcons with his score not being part of the final total.
Logan Sheets from River Valley shot a fine score of
40 which could have been better if a couple of putts
had fallen. Logan did earn medalist honors for the day.
Jordan Howell and Zach Morris both shot 49 for the runner up team. Brandon Cornell score of 62 gave River Valley
its final total. Cliff Chapman and Jordan Swisher also player
with their scores not included in the final count.
The Point Pleasant team was led by Denver Thomas
with a 45. Kelsey Allbright posted a 51. The other two
scores counting for the Big Blacks was a 54 from Jon
Rhea and a 55 from Matthew Martin. Non counting
scores were shot by Rhett Lanier and Travis Wamsley.

Bryan Walters | Daily Tribune

Point Pleasant football coach Dave Darst, middle facing front, talks with his troops following
a 70-14 victory over visiting Lincoln County Friday night in a Week 1 matchup at OVB Field in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

after Buskirk rumbled in
from 14 yards out with
9:39 left in the half.
Walton scored his third
and final touchdown
of the night at the 6:25
mark after a 29-yard run
made it a 49-6 affair, then
Mitchell tacked on a 26yard scoring run with
1:59 left to wrap up the
first half scoring at 56-6.
PPHS had 317 yards of
total offense and 13 first
downs by the intermission, compared to just
42 yards and three first
downs by the Panthers.
Point rushed 16 times for
207 yards and had one
turnover in the first half,
while LCHS had four
rushing yards on 20 carries and four turnovers
by the break.
Lincoln County struck
first blood in the second
half after Jacob Reynolds hauled in a 17-yard
scoring pass from Grant
Bates at the 8:32 mark of
the third quarter. Bryan
Miller added a successful
two-point run to make it

a 56-14 contest.
Point Pleasant countered with a seven-yard
scoring run from Grant
Safford at the 6:14 mark
to make it a 63-14 contest. Dakota Swann added a 40-yard TD run with
2:02 left in the third to
wrap up the scoring at
70-14.
The Big Blacks were penalized nine times for 65
yards and did not attempt
a punt in the triumph.
PPHS kicker Colin Peal
was also a perfect 8-for-8
on point-after tries.
Lincoln County was
flagged four times for 35
yards and also punted
four times for an average
of 27 yards.
Cody Mitchell led the
hosts with 108 rushing
yards on five attempts,
followed
by
Dakota
Swann with 53 yards
on seven carries. Jacob
Wamsley and Chase Walton respectively added
47 and 41 yards on three
rushes apiece, while
Gage Buskirk chipped in

28 yards on two totes.
Aden Yates was 5-of-10
passing for 110 yards and
also added 31 rushing
yards on five carries. Yates
threw two touchdowns
passes and an interception for the hosts. Buskirk
led the Big Blacks with 57
receiving yards on three
catches. Brian Gibbs and
Chase Walton each had
one catch for 37 and 16
yards, respectively.
Blake Taylor led the
Panthers with 59 rushing yards on 13 carries,
followed by Shane Wells
with 39 yards on six totes.
Grant Bates was 7-of9 passing for 54 yards,
throwing one TD and one
interception. Zach McGhee led the guests with
three catches for 23 yards.
Point Pleasant resumes
the Oak and Bucket series
next Friday night when
Ripley comes to OVB
Field for a Week 2 nonconference matchup in
Point Pleasant. Kickoff is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

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Tim Tucker | Submitted photo

Wahama senior quarterback Hunter Bradley runs for yardage
during the first half of Friday night’s victory over visiting Fayetteville in a Week 1 matchup at Bachtel Stadium in Mason, W.Va.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant
forced six turnovers and
accumulated 432 yards
of total offense Friday
night en route to a 70-14
thumping of visiting Lincoln County in a Week 1
football matchup at Ohio
Valley Bank Track and
Field in Mason County.
The Big Blacks (1-0)
forced four first-half turnovers and turned them all
into points, as the hosts
stormed out to commanding leads of 29-6 after one
quarter of play and 56-6
at the intermission.
The Panthers (0-1) —
who managed only three
first downs and 42 yards
of total offense in the first
half — scored the opening
points of the second half
to pull within 56-14, but
PPHS tacked on a pair of
third quarter touchdowns
to secure a 70-14 cushion
headed into the finale.
Neither team scored
the rest of the way, allowing the Big Blacks
to claim the convincing
56-point triumph.
Point Pleasant rushed
29 times for 322 yards
and added another 110
yards through air while
converting 15 first downs
and committing one turnover. Point also had two
defensive
touchdowns
and recovered five fumbles in the decision.
LCHS,
conversely,
ended the night with 43
rushes for 123 yards and
netted another 54 yards
through the air for a total
of 177 yards of offense.
The Panthers also scored
one defensive touchdown
in the setback.
Overall, it was a good
night for the Big Blacks
— which PPHS head
coach Dave Darst eluded
to afterwards.
“Obviously, I’m pleased
that we won that football
game,” Darst said. “Offensively, we did a good
job and I felt that we
grew up as the first half
went on. We had some
bad snaps early, mainly
because everyone was
jacked up and excited.
For as young as we are
offensively, I’m pleased
with how we executed.
“Really, I’m more impressed with our defense
tonight. We were flying to
the football and kids were
getting where they were
supposed to. It’s a great
start to the season, but
now we just need to keep
working to get better.”
Lincoln County fumbled on the opening play
from scrimmage, as Gage
Buskirk scooped up the
loose ball at the guests
29-yard line just six
seconds into the drive.
Chase Walton hauled in
a 16-yard scoring pass
from Aden Yates moments later, giving PPHS
a 7-0 edge with 10:16 left
in the first quarter.
Point Pleasant forced
a punt on the Panthers’
next drive and retained
possession, but an errant
Yates pass was picked
off by Chaz Wiley and
returned 59 yards to
paydirt — making it a 7-6
contest with 7:18 left in
the opening stanza. Lincoln County was never
closer the rest of the way.
Buskirk hauled in a 39yard scoring pass from
Yates at the 6:49 mark
for a 14-6 lead, then defensive end Jon Peterson ripped the ball away
from LCHS quarterback
Grant Bates 13 seconds
later and rumbled 16
yards to paydirt for a
21-6 advantage.
Cody Mitchell closed
out the first quarter
scoring with a 60-yard
jaunt at the 2:49 mark,
giving the hosts a 27-6
lead. Walton hauled in
a pass from Buskirk for
the successful two-point
conversion, making it a
29-6 advantage.
Walton started the
second quarter scoring
with a 10-yard scamper
to paydirt, which made it
a 35-6 contest with 9:48
left in the first half. PPHS
recovered a live ball on
the ensuing kickoff and
needed just nine seconds
to make it a 42-6 game

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Help Wanted General

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

FINANCIAL SERVICES

MDS Nurse

Bridal Items

Money To Lend

Victoria’s Prom &amp;
Bridal Boutique

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

·Valid Ohio RN license
·Minimum 1 year experience
working with the RAI process
in a LTC setting

Buy 1 Long Dress
Get 1 Long Dress for $10.00!

*Limited Time Only, While Supplies Last.

Tuxedo Rentals Available.
M-F 10am-6pm
Sat. 10am-3pm
415 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT, WV

·Excellent knowledge of case
mix RUGs (state and federal)
and the Federal mandated
Medicare PPS process

(304)675-2786

·RAC-CT Certification
preferred

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

EMPLOYMENT

Excavating

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Competitive wages &amp; benefits!
Apply: Abbyshire Place
vhcjobs@vrablehealthcare.com
EOE

Reese

EMPLOYMENT

Medical / Health

Notices

Business Consulting

Building / Construction / Skilled

STNAs

Pleasant Valley Log
Homes &amp; Construction

WE CAN HELP!

Building log &amp;
conventional homes at
affordable prices
www.pvloghomes.com

GALLIA FAMILY PRACTICE
1086 Jackson Pike, Suite 206

740-547-7924

60436488

Gallipolis, Ohio

740-441-9800
Nicholas V. Landry D.O. Inc.

We also build
garages &amp; pole barns60440830

60446013

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Health

Drivers: Great Pay, Bonuses
&amp; 100% PAID Health Ins! CDLA, 1yr TT Exp. w/Tank-Haz
End. Req. We also have Ohio
Crude Oil Openings. Martin
Transport: 1-888-993-0967

Professional Services

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

60431236

• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available

60443582

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

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Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

Auctions
FINANCIAL SERVICES

Drivers:

$2500
Sign-On Bonus!
Dedicated Zanesville Account!
Great Pay,
Benefits, Miles,
Weekly Home-Time &amp; More!
1-888-567-3109

Help Wanted General

Career Opportunity

Sales/Marketing Representative
Applicant must be energetic and enthusiastic. This position requires an individual that possesses both Internet
Marketing Skills and face-to-face sales skills. The successful applicant will be self-motivated with a desire to
make things happen.
Please apply by mailing your resume to:
P.O. Box 807 Gallipolis, OH 45631

60446596

Auctions

FOUND Large toolbox near
Darwin Watched fly out of a
truck. Email description to
sauberk@gmail.com

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EOE

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Full-time/Part-time
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Experienced Preferred
But Training Available.
Interested Candidates can
Call 304-273-9482 or
come in and fill out an
application.
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood, WV 26164

Drivers: HOME WEEKLY/BIWEEKLY.
Layover/Detention/Short Haul
Pay. 70% D&amp;H/90% NO
Touch. No Canada/Hazmat or
NYC! BC/BS, Dental,
Vision,401k etc… Class A CDL
w/6 mos. Exp. 877-705-9261

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
4-FAMILY 3.4mi out Jerry's
Run onto Hobert Dr, Apple
Grove. Sept 3 &amp; 4. 9-6

REAL ESTATE SALES

YARD SALE:Aug 31st 8am,
2700 Lincoln Ave, Point. Hurley, Billabong, AE clothes.
Household items, Wt Bench.

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Drivers &amp; Delivery

SERVICES

DRIVERS NEEDED-CLASS A CDL

Integrity M.S.
Bidwell, Ohio
Looking for drivers experienced in transporting
refrigerated and general freight.
.40 per mile, Home most weekends
Call Harold 740-645-2345
or send resume to:
harold@integritymovingandstorage.com

60438842

Large Auction
Thurs., Sept. 5, 2013
@ 5:30 P.M.

Real Estate Auction

Located at The Auction Center, Rt. 62 North Mason, WV.
Dana Jones is reducing household/personal items.
Collectibles Sets of china, baskets, good linens, old belt buckles,
razors, sets of flatware, old jewelry, anvil, oil lamps, crocks, pink &amp;
green def, glassware, rolls of material, blue fruit jars, stone jars, carnival
pitcher, wooden bucket, marbles, good early coffee tea kettle, rolling
pins, Royal Albert China, Mother of Pearl Opera Binoculars, small trunk
with tray, milk can, cookware, cross-cut saw and much more.
Tools Sears Craftsman 10in Radial Arm Saw, yard tools and much more.
Furniture China Cabinet, wash stand, desks, Rocker’s Chairs, 3 Pc
B.R. Suit, Mahogany Slant Front Desk, 1940s White Cabinet, Cherry
Open Front China Cab., with much more.

U.S. Government Property

2.79 acres Vacant Land
Former US Postal Service Site
State Route 62
Point Pleasant, WV

Auctioneer Note: Much more items will be at auction than listed above.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEASRON, JR. #1955
304-773-5447 or 304-593-5118

Health
The Mason County Day Report Center is accepting applications for a Substance Abuse
Instructor. This position will be
a contract employee working
part-time. Requirement includes a minimum of a bachelchology, social work or related
field and a professional license or addiction certification
(C.A.C, L.S.W., L.P.C., etc).
Please send your resume to
Amanda L. Tarbett, Director,
221 ½ Main Street, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550. Last day
to accept resumes is September 6, 2013.
The Mason County Day Report Center is accepting applications for a Substance Abuse
Instructor. This position will be
a contract employee working
part-time. Requirement includes a minimum of a bachel-

ONLINE AUCTION

Terms: Cash or Check with ID
Food Available

chology, social work or related
field and a professional license or addiction certification
(C.A.C, L.S.W., L.P.C., etc).
Please send your resume to
Amanda L. Tarbett, Director,
221 ½ Main Street, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550. Last day
to accept resumes is September 6, 2013.

Auction Closes
Sept. 5, 2013

Call: Louis Mancuso
louis.mancuso@gsa.gov
http://RealEstateSales.gov

GSA (404) 331-9451

Auctions

Ohio University surplus items will be sold at public auction. NOTE: Each quarter is a completely new batch
of surplus items to be sold. All Items are Sold As Is – No Guarantee &amp; No Returns. Sales Tax will be
charged. If Tax Exempt – Must Provide Tax ID# Paperwork at Registration. Visit the OU WEB site for a
complete &amp; specific listing and some photos: www.ohiou.edu/surplus. Preview the week before – call 740593-0463 from 8:00-4:00 for further information.
DIRECTIONS: Rt. 33/50 to Athens to Rt. 682 exit, go through light at Richland Avenue, turn left at The
Ridges and follow signs to Building 9. Technology equipment will be sold first beginning at 9:00 a.m. until
finished. Two auction rings beginning at 11:00 until finished.
VEHICLES-Sold at NOON: 1998 Ford Windstar Van w/16,700 miles,
KITCHEN &amp; OTHER EQUIPMENT: True 3-door commercial refrigeration unit, Whirlpool dishwasher,
stoves, household refrigerators, Franklin &amp; Kent floor scrubber buffers, vacuums,
COMPUTERS &amp; TECHNOLOGY/SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT: lots of desktop computers, lots of printers,
lots of laptop computers, copiers, fax machines, scanners, shredders, DVD &amp; VHS players, VCRs, projectors,
televisions, miscellaneous keyboards, cables, extension cords, IBM typewriters,
OFFICE &amp; HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: wood &amp; metal desks, roll carts, 2-dr &amp; 4-dr lateral &amp; vertical
filing cabinets, mailbox shelf units, several wooden &amp; metal shelf units, storage cabinets, assortment of
tables, weighing tables, some pictures, decorations,
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: 2-Master Blood torpedo-shaped kerosene heaters, several wooden ladders
(different heights), skid of misc. window screens, skid of ceiling tile, several boxes of baseboard, several
Hubbell round light fixtures and Holophane round light fixtures, and many other items.
TERMS: Cash or check w/positive I.D., American Express, Master Card &amp; Visa Credit Cards accepted.
Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available. Food will be available. Not responsible
for loss or accidents.

Medical / Health
Dr. Randall Hawkins is now
taking new patients. 2520 Valley drive Suite 212 Pt. Pleasant WV. (304)675-7700
EDUCATION

REAL ESTATE SALES

Land (Acreage)
55.75 acres of Land located on
Lower 9 Mile off Crab Creek
Rd. asking $60k. 304-5763129
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 Bdrm Apartment - New
Haven area - NO PETS - Deposit &amp; references (740) 9920165
2 Bedroom 2nd Floor APT. AirWasher -Dryer Hook-up. NO
PETS, Refs. $500month $500
deposit Ph: 740-339-3063
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Downtown Apartment for rent.
1 Bedroom no pets. 304-6753788
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets Ph: 304-6740023 or 304-444-4268

Houses For Rent

Ohio Valley Home Health is accepting
applications for motivated individuals to fill our
Gallipolis Branch

LPN Position

2 Bedroom - 438 Burkhart Ln.,
Gallipolis
$575/month No Pets 740-8531101
4BR, 2 miles west of Holzer's,
Gallipolis, $850 per month, NO
PETS 740-441-7979
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

Competitive wages and excellent benefits
including Health, Dental, Vision, Paid
Vacation Days, Extended Leave Benefit,
Paid Holidays, Company Car and much more!
Qualifications:
• LPN – OH Licensed
• Excellent Documentation Skills
• Basic Computer Knowledge
• Excellent Organization and Time
Management Skills
• Able to work independently
• Home internet connection
• Willing to travel to Gallia &amp; Surrounding Counties

Rentals
3 Bdrm Mobile Home, Country
Setting, W/D Very Nice &amp;
Clean $450/mo. plus 1 mth Deposit (Rutland Area) 742-7010
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

For more information please call
April Burgett, RN, Administrator
at 740-441-1393
or apply at 1480 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, Ohio
Applications available at www.ovhh.org
Email resume: aburgett@ovhh.org

ANIMALS

Pets
Free to a Good Home - Kittens - Call 256-6038
GIVEAWAY - 3 - 3 month old
Kittens to a Good Home (Inside Only) Liter trained call
446-3897 or 446-1282

OWNER: Ohio University
WEB: www. ohiou.edu/surplus

60446097

Sheridan’s SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC

AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Help Wanted General
Maintenance Person wanted at
the Gallipolis Quality Inn.
Some experience required,
References a must. Apply in
person, NO Phone calls
please.

Upstairs Apartment @ 238 1st
Ave - Kitchen with Stove &amp; refrigerator. One or two people $550/mo plus utilities, deposit
&amp; reference NO PETS 4464926

Enjoy your weekends?
Enjoy working dayshift?
Enjoy a friendly working
environment?

Athens, OH
Saturday, September 7 – 9:00 a.m.

Truck Driver Needed - Henderson WV based - CDL License
&amp; 2 yrs experience MVR required. Call 304-675-7434

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

Health

SURPLUS AUCTION
OHIO UNIVERSITY

Layover/Detention/Short
Haul Pay
70% D &amp; H/90% NO
Touch. No
Canada/Hazmat or NYC!
BC/BS, Dental,
Vision,401k etc…
Class A CDL w/6 mos.
Exp.
877-705-9261

Professional Services

60441776

60446583

Owner: Dana Jones

Lost &amp; Found

EDUCATION

Real Estate Auction

For pics and more info visit www.auctionzip.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS

60443267

ADDICTION

Backhoe–Trenching–Trucking
Septic Systems–Basements
Land Clearing–Site Prep
Dozer – and More!
Large or Small Jobs
Since 1963
Free Estimates
(740) 245-9921

60434384

SERVICES

Drivers: HOME
WEEKLY/BI-WEEKLY

Excavating

60442794

ANNOUNCEMENTS

60444480

AGRICULTURE

www.ovhh.org
60445995

�Sunday, September 1, 2013

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî��

&amp;C6Aî�@@E32==î)4@C6DîWî-66&lt;î
OHIO
Ashville Teays Valley 52, Williamsport Westfall 22
Athens 62, Gallipolis Gallia 19
Bainbridge Paint Valley 44, Lockland 0
Baltimore Liberty Union 52, Sugar Grove Berne Union 0
Beverly Ft. Frye 23, Hannibal River 17
Bloom-Carroll 47, Heath 16
Centerville 38, Pickerington Cent. 33
Chillicothe 20, Johnstown-Monroe 7
Circleville Logan Elm 34, Chillicothe Zane Trace 14
Cols. Hartley 38, Amanda-Clearcreek 6
Cols. Ready 26, Newark Cath. 14
Crown City S. Gallia 18, Portsmouth Sciotoville 13
Fayetteville-Perry 20, Batavia Clermont NE 12
Greenfield McClain 47, Frankfort Adena 21
Lancaster 57, Logan 7
Lucasville Valley 28, Portsmouth 19
Manchester 21, Franklin Furnace Green 13
Marietta 41, McConnelsville Morgan 28
McArthur Vinton County 33, Chillicothe Unioto 19
Minford 40, Ironton Rock Hill 6
Mt. Orab Western Brown 49, Hillsboro 6
New Lexington 41, Lancaster Fairfield Union 35

AUTOMOTIVE

New Matamoras Frontier 39, Sarahsville Shenandoah 14
Newark Licking Valley 17, Dresden Tri-Valley 14
Oak Hill 14, Chesapeake 0
Philo 46, Zanesville W. Muskingum 7
Pickerington N. 20, Cols. St. Charles 0
Pomeroy Meigs 46, Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 44
Racine Southern 31, Bidwell River Valley 0
S. Point 20, Fleming Co., Ky. 14
Southeastern 19, McDermott Scioto NW 17
Washington C.H. 35, Wilmington 28
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 42, Circleville 26
Waterford 20, Corning Miller 12
Waverly 14, Piketon 7
Wheelersburg 49, Ironton 12
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 20, Reedsville Eastern 0
Zanesville 49, Newark 13
WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield 60, Graham, Va. 38
Bridgeport 47, Buckhannon-Upshur 28
Clarke County, Va. 34, Berkeley Springs 0
Clay-Battelle 41, Paden City 6
Doddridge County 20, South Harrison 6
East Fairmont 28, Liberty Harrison 21

Carpeting
1988 21ft Shamrock Center
Console, inboard, single Ford
351 cubic inch, water cooled,
gas engine, recent complete
overhaul, $12,000 cost. Deluxe equipped for large Lake
or Gulf usage, $35,000 replacement value, $14,000 insured value, New Magic tilt
Trailer $4,000, asking
$10,000 for all, will consider
offer, interested parties only,
call 740-654-3813 for details
&amp; full description.

Sale-Carpet and Vinyl Direct
Mill pricing, $5.95 sq/yd and
up, Free Estimates. Mollohan
Carpet 317 ST RT 7 North,
Gallipolis OH 45631 740-4467444
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!
1-800-734-5524

Richmond Edison, Ohio 33, Oak Glen 21
Richwood 32, Webster County 28
River View 28, Mount View 0
Roane County 28, Clay County 13
Sherando, Va. 40, Musselman 13
Sissonville 40, Chapmanville 22
Spring Valley 41, St. Albans 14
St. Marys 32, Ritchie County 10
Summers County 18, PikeView 12
Tucker County 21, Pocahontas County 7
Tug Valley 20, Sherman 6
University 28, Lewis County 7
Valley Fayette 14, Wirt County 8
Valley Wetzel 41, Hannan 8
Wahama 60, Fayetteville 26
Washington 47, Hedgesville 14
Wayne 28, Tolsia 0
Westside 44, Liberty Raleigh 16
Wheeling Park 45, Keyser 14
Williamstown 27, Tyler Consolidated 14
Winfield 42, Woodrow Wilson 19
Wyoming East 27, Mingo Central 26
Source: AP sports wire.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

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UNITED BREAST CANCER
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MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Boats &amp; Marinas

East Hardy 37, Page County, Va. 34
Fairmont Senior 28, Robert C. Byrd 7
Frankfort 35, North Marion 13
Gilmer County 31, Calhoun County 18
Greenbrier East 47, James Monroe 22
Greenbrier West 6, Nicholas County 0
Hampshire 34, Preston 14
Herbert Hoover 40, Scott 35
Huntington 23, Hurricane 8
Independence 28, Midland Trail 21
Jefferson 58, Spring Mills 6
Linsly 14, Magnolia 7
Logan 40, Man 20
Martinsburg 20, H.D. Woodson, D.C. 14
Meadow Bridge 56, Van 20
Moorefield 29, Petersburg 25
Morgantown 47, Brooke 7
Nitro 41, Poca 22
Oak Hill 48, Elkins 14
Parkersburg South 47, Ripley 35
Pendleton County 34, Tygarts Valley 6
Philip Barbour 52, Grafton 14
Point Pleasant 70, Lincoln County 14
Princeton 69, Shady Spring 0

MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Entertainment

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

7 PM

7:30

SEPTEMBER 1, 2013
8 PM

8:30

America's Got Talent The first 12 semi-finalists perform for
America's vote. TVPG
ABC Fall Preview (N) TVG
Secret Millionaire "Wing
ABC
!&amp;'"% (8.1)
Lam: Mobile, AL" (N) TVPG
American Dad Simp. "Black- Simps. "Dark
BobB "Family
FOX
!(#'% (11.1)
Eyed, Please" Knight Court"
Fracas"
60 Minutes TVG
Big Brother (N) TV14
CBS
NBC

(3.1)

!"#$%

!)!*% (13.1)

NBC

America's Got Talent The first 12 semi-finalists perform for

PBS

Antiques Roadshow "Billings, Glass Half Empty (N) TVPG

!+#,% (15.1) America's vote. TVPG
!)-.% (20.1) MT (Hour Two)" TVG
CABLE

A&amp;E
AMC
APL
BET
BRAVO
CMT
CNN
COMC
DISC
DISN
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAM
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TVL
USA
VH1
WGN
PREMIUM

HBO
MAX
SHOW

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

TV's Funniest A star-studded salute to TV's funniest
moments. (N) TVPG
MDA Show of Strength Raising funds for the Muscular
Dystrophy Association. (N) TVPG
Family Guy
Family G. "The Eyewitness News TVG
"Space Cadet" Giggity Wife"
Unforgettable "Line Up or
The Mentalist "Red Velvet
Shut Up" (N) TV14
Cupcakes" TV14
TV's Funniest A star-studded salute to TV's funniest
moments. (N) TVPG
Masterpiece Mystery! "Silk" Pt. 2 of 3 cont'd Sept 8 (N)
TVPG

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

WSAZ News
(:35) Storm
Tonight
Stories
Eyewitness
(:35) Ent.
News 11 p.m. Tonight
Ring of Honor Wrestling
TVPG
13 News
CSI: Miami
Weekend
WTAP News at (:35) Burn
11
Notice
Rock Prophecies TVPG

11 PM

11:30

Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
(4:00) ! !!! Lord of the
(:55) Breaking Bad
Breaking Bad "Rabid Dog"
(:05) Low Winter Sun
(:05) Talking
(:35) Br. Bad
Rings: The Two Towers TV14 "Confessions" TV14
(N) TV14
"Catacombs" (N)
Bad (N)
"Rabid Dog"
Alien Autopsy Update on
Mermaids "The Body Found" Remains of a modern day
Mermaids "The New
Mermaids "The Body Found"
autopsy film. TVPG
mermaid have been discovered. TV14
Evidence" TVPG
TV14
(5:30) ! Daddy's Little Girls
Sunday Best (N)
Sunday Best "Finale" (N)
Sunday Best
Sunday Best "Finale"
Housewives NJ "Spaghetti
Wives NJ "Horse Whisper to a The Real Housewives
Tamra's (N) /(:15)
(:15) Housewives NJ "Horse
Western &amp; Meatballs" TV14
Scream" (N) TV14
"Secrets Revealed" (N) TV14
Housewives/NewJersey TV14 Whisper to a Scream" TV14
(5:15) ! !! Pure Country
! !! National Lampoon's European Vacation TV14
(:15) ! !!!! Urban Cowboy ('80, Dra) TVMA
Boston's Finest "Love Hurts" B. Finest "Family Matters"
Boston's Finest
B. Finest "Boston's Finest"
Boston's Finest "Love Hurts"
5:40 ! Harold &amp; Kumar
Gabriel Iglesias: Aloha Fluffy Fluffy reveals
(:35) Seriously Funny Kevin's
(:35) Gabriel Iglesias Fluffy reveals his crazy
Escape From Guantanamo... his crazy world of family and friends. TV14
getting older and wiser. TVMA world of family and friends. TV14
Repo "Mid-Air Collision"
Gold Rush "The Frozen North" GoldRush "Ends of the Earth" Jungle Gold "Bailed Out" (N) GoldRush "Ends of the Earth"
Jessie
Jessie
Austin "Sports Austin "Family Austin "Tunes Austin and
Jessie
Dog With a
Austin and
Good Luck
and Sprains"
and Feuds"
&amp; Trials"
Ally
Blog
Ally
Charlie
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
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Total Divas "Diva Las Vegas" The Kardashians
Sprnt Cup
NASCAR Auto Racing Advocare 500 Sprint Cup Series Site: Atlanta Motor Speedway -- Hampton, Ga. (L) TVG
SportsCenter
Baseball Tonight (L)
MLB Baseball New York Mets vs. Washington Nationals Site: Nationals Park (L) TVG
SportsCenter Press Pass
(5:30) ! !!! ! !! Failure to Launch ('06, Com) Matthew
! !! Burlesque ('10, Dra) Christina Aguilera, Cher. A small town girl falls
You Again
McConaughey. TV14
in love with burlesque after starting a new job in Los Angeles. TV14
Great FoodTruck Race "A
Chopped "Gyro We Go Again" The Great Food Truck Race
Cutthroat Kitchen "Let Them Iron Chef America "Garces
Strange Brew in Portland" TVG TVG
(N) TVG
Eat Cupcakes" (N) TVG
vs. Bissonnette" (N) TVPG
(4:30) ! !! The A-Team
! !!! The Proposal ('09, Com) Sandra Bullock. A pushy woman forces
! !!! The Proposal ('09, Com) Sandra
('10, Act) Liam Neeson. TV14 her assistant to marry her in order to avoid deportation to Canada. TV14
Bullock. TV14
House
House
Ext. Homes "Upside Down,
Love It or List It, Too
House Hunters Renovation
House
House
Hunters
Hunters Int'l
Wave, Spaceship" TVPG
"Upgrade for Uncle"
(N) TVPG
Hunters
Hunters Int'l
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Mountain Men "End of the
Mountain Men "Thin Ice"
Mountain Men "Going for
Mountain Men "Ticking
Line" TVPG
TVPG
Broke" TVPG
Clock" TVPG
! !!! A Walk to Remember ('02, Rom) Mandy Moore. A ! !! The Switch ('10, Com/Dra) Jason Bateman. A
! !!! A Walk to
popular male student falls for minister's daughter. TVPG
woman learns of a switch with her insemination. TV14
Remember ('02, Rom) TVPG
Catfish
Teen Mom 2 "Nothing Stays the Same" TVPG
2013 VMAs
Haunted Hath Haunted Hath See Dad Run WendVinn (N) ! !! Racing Stripes ('05, Fam) Bruce Greenwood. TVPG
Friends
Friends 1/2
Bar Rescue "Jon T, He Don't
Bar Rescue "Bottomless Pit" Bar Rescue "There's No
Tattoo Rescue "Funkytown is Bar Rescue "Karaoke
Like It"
Crying in the Bar Business"
Going Down"
Katastrophe"
(6:00) ! !!! The Abyss ('89, Sci-Fi) Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Ed Harris. A team of
Ghost Mine "Descent Into
Ghost Mine "Disturbance at
Darkness" TVPG
the Inn" TVPG
divers encounters powerful alien life while searching for a nuclear submarine. TV14
(6:00) ! !!! 300 ('06,
! !!! Transformers (2007, Action) Megan Fox, Josh Duhamel, Shia LeBoeuf. Two alien ! !! Journey to the Center
Epic) Gerard Butler. TVMA
robot tribes battling for supremacy come to Earth seeking an energy source. TV14
of the Earth ('08, Adv) TV14
(5:45) ! !!!! The Birds
! !!! Shadow of a Doubt ('43, Thril) Teresa Wright. A girl ! !!!! Psycho ('60, Hor) Janet Leigh, Anthony Perkins. A
('63, Hor) Rod Taylor. TV14
suspects her uncle is a mass murderer. TVPG
woman decides to take refuge in an unusual motel. TVMA
Break Amish: LA "Sin City"
Sister Wives
Sister W (N)
Sister Wives
Breaking Amish: LA (N)
Sister Wives
Sister Wives
6: ! The Taking of Pelham... ! !!! Four Brothers ('05, Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
(:15) ! !!! Four Brothers ('05, Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
(6:00) ! !!! The Smurfs
Amazing
The Looney
Cleveland
Family Guy
Bob's Burgers Family Guy
China, IL/(:15) China, IL/(:45)
('11, Child) TVPG
Gumball
Tunes Show
"Like a Boss"
"Bad Tina"
China, IL
China, IL
Paradise "Steak Paradise"
Ride (N)
Ride (N)
Fandem (N)
Bikinis
Rock My RV (N)
Mega RV Countdown
(:05) G. Girls
(:45) Golden
(:20) Golden Girls "The
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
G. Girls "Rose Hot/ Cleve.
(:35) Hot In
"The Triangle" Girls
Competition" TVPG
"The Break-In" "Pilot"
the Prude"
"All My Exes"
"Canoga Falls"
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Victims Unit "Swing" TV14
Victims Unit "Lust" TV14
Victims Unit "Painless" TV14 Victims Unit "Savior" TV14
Victims Unit "Lunacy" TV14
Basketball Wives
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La La's Full
La La's Full
Hollywood Exes
Bloopers
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
WGN News
(:40) Replay
! Throw Momma From the...

7 PM

7:30

(5:15) !

Les Misérables ('12,
Mus) Hugh Jackman. TVPG
(6:00) ! !! Magic Mike
('12, Dra) TV14
Ray Donovan "Road Trip"
TVMA

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

! !!! The Bourne Legacy ('12, Act) Jeremy Renner.

Previous films have triggered something in a new hero. TV14
! !! War of the Worlds ('05, Act) Tom Cruise. A man
protects his children when aliens invade Earth. TV14
! !!! Real Steel ('11, Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman. A robot
boxing promoter re-connects with his son. TV14

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

(:15) ! !!

Ted ('12, Comedy) Mila Kunis, Seth MacFarlane,
Mark Wahlberg. A man's teddy bear comes to life. TV14
! !! Dark Shadows ('12, Fant) Michelle Pfeiffer, Johnny
Depp. Vampire comes to aid of dysfunctional family. TVPG
(:05) ALL
(:35) ALL
(:05) ! Gone ('11, Thril) Molly
Parker. TV14
ACCESS
ACCESS

Entertainment

MONDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

NBC

!"#$%

ABC

!&amp;'"%

(3.1)
(8.1)

FOX

!(#'% (11.1)

CBS

!)!*% (13.1)

NBC

!+#,% (15.1)

PBS

!)-.% (20.1)
CABLE

A&amp;E
AMC
APL
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SHOW

7 PM

7:30

SEPTEMBER 2, 2013
8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

American Ninja Warrior "Vegas Finals" The top finishers
Siberia "One by One" (N)
tackle the ultimate challenge. TVPG
TV14
EntertainShark Tank TVPG
Mistresses "When One Door
Castle "The Fast and the
ment Tonight
Closes..." (N) TV14
Furriest" TVPG
Two and a
The Big Bang Raising Hope Raising Hope New Girl
Mindy "Take
Eyewitness News TVG
Half Men
Theory
"Arbor Daze"
Me With You"
13 News at
Inside Edition Mother "The
M&amp;M "Molly
2 Broke Girls Mike &amp; Molly Under the Dome "Speak of
7:00 p.m.
Bro Mitzvah"
in the Middle"
"Mike's Boss" the Devil" (N) TV14
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
American Ninja Warrior "Vegas Finals" The top finishers
Siberia "One by One" (N)
Fortune
tackle the ultimate challenge. TVPG
TV14
PBS NewsHour TVG
Antiques Roadshow "Tasty
National Parks "The Scripture of Nature (1851-1890)"
Treasures" TVG
Yosemite's appeal forced Congress to protect the land. TVG
Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

7 PM

Jeopardy!

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

WSAZ News
Tonight
Eyewitness
News 11
The Simpsons
"HOMR"
13 News

(:35) Tonight
Show J. Leno
(:35) Jimmy
Kimmel Live
Loves Ray
"Net Worth"
(:35) David
Letterman
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
11
Show J. Leno
Tavis Smiley
E Street
(N)
"Brain Health"

11 PM

11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars
(6:00) ! !! Above the Law
(‘88, Act) TV14
Call of the
Call Wildman
Wildman
"Santa Claws"
(6:00) ! Friday After Next
Orange County Social (N)
TV14
Cowboys Cheerleaders
OutFront
Tosh.O
Tosh.O

Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Modern Dads Modern Dads
! !! Hard to Kill (‘90, Act) Kelly Le Brock, Steven Seagal. ! !! Exit Wounds (‘01, Act) Isaiah Washington, Steven
A detective wishes to avenge the death of his family. TVMA
Seagal. An inner-city officer uncovers police corruption. TVM
Call of the
Call of the
Call of the
Call of the
Call of the
To Be
Call of the
Call of the
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman (N)
Announced
Wildman
Wildman
BET Awards Includes performances by Chris Brown, Miguel and more. TVPG
Tamra's "Tamra and Eddie's
House Miami "Black Magic"
Below Deck "Reunion" (N)
Tamra's Wedding "Tamra and
Wedding Kick Off" (P) (N)
(N) TV14
TVPG
Eddie's Wedding Kick Off"
! !! Wild Hogs (‘07, Com) John Travolta. TV14
Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Cops: Reload
Anderson Cooper 360
Cheshire Interviews reveal the impact of the murders. TVMA Anderson Cooper 360
Tosh.O
Tosh.O
Tosh.O
Tosh.O
The Comedy Central Roast "James Franco"
The Comedy
(N) TVMA
Central Roast
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud (N)
Turn and Burn (N)
Fast N' Loud
Jessie
Liv and
! Teen Beach Movie (‘13, Fam) Ross
(:45) Ferb "Der Austin and
Jessie
A.N.T. "Bad
Austin and
Maddie
Lynch. TVPG
Kinderlumper" Ally
"Badfellas"
RomANTs"
Ally
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Kardash "Backdoor Bruiser"
ChelseaLately Movie
College Football Live (L)
NCAA Football Florida State vs. Pittsburgh (L) TVPG
SportsCenter
ITF Tennis U.S. Open Men's Round of 16 and Women's Round of 16 (L) TVG
Olbermann (L)
The 700 Club TVPG
! !!! The Breakfast Club (‘85, Dra) Emilio Estevez, Judd ! !!! Sixteen Candles (‘84, Com) Molly Ringwald. A
Nelson. Five students spend a Saturday in detention. TVMA
sixteen-year-old girl is set up with a handsome jock. TV14
Diners "Diners Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- The Shed (N) Bubba-Q "Son Diners, Drive- Diners, DriveA-Plenty"
Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins (N)
of a Gun" (N) Ins and Dives Ins and Dives
(5:30) ! !!! Just Go With
! !! Grown Ups (‘10, Com) Kevin James, Adam Sandler.
! !! Grown Ups (‘10, Com) Kevin James, Adam Sandler.
It (‘11, Com) TV14
Good friends reunite after their basketball coach dies. TVPG
Good friends reunite after their basketball coach dies. TVPG
Love It or List It "Home
Beachfront
Beachfront
Love It or List It "Collapsing
House
House
Love It or List It "Perfect
Harmony" TVPG
Bargain (N)
Bargain (N)
Victorian" (N) TVPG
Hunters (N)
Hunters (N)
Home Repairs" TVPG
American Pickers "Eighth
American Pickers "Picking
American Pickers "Haunted
American Pickers "Bad
God, Guns
God, Guns
Grade Humor" TVPG
Superheroes" TVPG
Honeyhole" TVPG
Mother Shucker" TVPG
and Autos
"Shine On"
(6:00) ! !! Obsessed (‘09,
! ! Madea Goes to Jail (‘09, Com) Derek Luke, Tyler Perry. ! !! Madea's Family Reunion (‘06, Com) Tyler Perry.
Thril) Beyoncé Knowles. TV14 An impulsive grandmother winds up in jail. TV14
Madea finds herself plagued by family trouble. TV14
Being Maci "Preview"
Teen Mom 2 "Catch Up Special" TVPG
Teen Mom "Change of Heart" Teen Mom 2
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Awesome (N) Studio 10 (N) Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Cops "Coast
Cops "Ho! Ho! Cops "Liar Liar Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops "Coast
Cops "In
to Coast"
Ho! #8"
#2"
to Coast"
Denial #3"
! Ghost Shark (‘13, Hor) Mackenzie Rosman. A ghost shark ! !! Sharknado (‘13, Horror) Cassie Scerbo, Ian Ziering,
! 2-Headed Shark Attack
terrorizes a town with a dark past. TV14
Tara Reid. A shark-fill tornado terrorizes Los Angeles. TV14
(‘12, Sci-Fi) TV14
Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Family G. "The Fam.G "Livin'
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan Guests Kevin Hart,
Bubble Boy"
Cartoon"
Blind Side"
on a Prayer"
Theory
Theory
Theory
Eve, Chris Kluwe TV14
5:45 ! Burden Werner
! Edison Album
Lumiere's
The Story of Film
(:15) A Trip to
! Falling
of Dreams
Herzog...
Picture
the Moon
Leaves
Undercover Boss
Undercover Boss
Under Boss "Boston Market" Undercover Boss "Tilted Kilt" Under Boss "Boston Market"
Castle "Undead Again"
Castle "Always"
Castle "Kick the Ballistics"
Rizzoli "Remember Me"
Castle "Kill Shot"
Adventure
Regular Show Uncle
MAD (N)/(:45) King of the
Family Guy
King of the
Bob's Burgers American Dad Family Guy
Time (N)
(N)
Grandpa (N)
Uncle
Hill
Hill
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods America (N)
Hotel "Tropical Termites" (N)
Hotel Impossible
Hot/ Cleve.
Hot in
Hot/ Cleve.
Hot/ Cleve.
Ray "Traffic
Loves Ray "Six Raymond "The Loves Ray
Queens "Life
(:35) Queens
"The Fixer"
Cleveland
"Corpse Bride" "All My Exes"
School"
Feet Under"
Garage Sale"
"The Invasion" Sentence"
"Veiled Threat"
NCIS: Los Angeles "Bounty"
WWE Monday Night Raw TVPG
(:05) Summer Camp "Winner
TV14
Takes All" (SF) (N) TVPG
Basketball Wives
Basketball Wives (N)
TI Tiny (N)
Marrying (N)
Basketball Wives
T.I. and Tiny
Marrying
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
WGN News at Nine
Funniest Home Videos

7 PM
(6:30) !

7:30

Beyonce: Life Is But
a Dream TVMA
(6:15) ! !!! Con Air (‘97,
Act) Nicolas Cage. TVMA
(5:15) ! !!! Gangs of New
York (‘02, Dra) TVM

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

! !! Horrible Bosses (‘11, Com) Jason

9:30
(:45) ! !!

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

In Time (‘11, Act) Justin Timberlake. A man
(:40) Hard
Knocks
accused of murder runs from the 'time keepers.' TVPG
(:15) ! !!!! The Lucky One (‘12, Dra) Taylor Schilling,
! !! Jawbreaker (‘98, Susp) Rose
Strike Back
Zac Efron. Marine searches for woman in photo. TVPG
McGowan. TV14
! !!! The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (‘11,
! Lawless (‘12, Cri) Shia LaBeouf, Guy Pearce, Tom Hardy.
Dra) Kristen Stewart. TV14
A new deputy threatens a bootlegging gang. TVMA
Bateman. TV14

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Rebels second at Cliffside quad match
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS,
Ohio
— The South Gallia golf
team came away with second place Thursday night
during a quad match
against Belpre, Miller
and Federal Hocking at
Cliffside Golf Course in
the Old French City.
The host Rebels finished the 9-hole event
with a team tally of 193,
which was eight shots
back of eventual champion Belpre (185). Miller
finished the day third

with a tally of 203, while
Federal Hocking had to
forfeit as a team due to a
lack of enough players.
Gus Slone led SGHS
with a 44, followed by
Ethan Swain with a 47.
Cuyler Mills and Chris
Brumfield rounded out the
team scoring with matching 51s. Tristin Davis and
Caitlyn Vanscoy also added
respective rounds of 63
and 77 for the Rebels.
Sam Petty of Belpre
came away with medalist
honors after firing a 2-over
par round of 38. Teammate
Brennan Ferrell was the

overall runner-up with a
42, followed by Alex Perry
with a 46 and Jackie Cunningham with a 59.
Hayden Lowe fired a
non-counting 71 for the
Golden Eagles. Hayden
Plummer shot a 39, but his
round ended in disqualification for BHS.
Shaun Hayes led Miller with a 48, followed
by Chris Gamble with a
49 and Austin Doughty
with a 51. Colton Pargeon rounded out the
Falcons’ tally with a 55,
while Zack Tokie carded
a non-counting 65.

Blue Angels drop heartbreaker at Warren
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

VINCENT, Ohio — The match was
worth the price of admission, but the result made for a long bus ride home.
The Gallia Academy volleyball team
stormed out to a two-games-to-one lead
Thursday night, but host Warren rallied
with consecutive victories to secure a
thrilling 22-25, 25-18, 20-25, 25-21, 20-18
decision in the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League opener for both programs.
The Lady Warriors ended the night with
a total of five more points than the visiting
Blue Angels (3-2, 0-1 SEOAL) during the
contest, but those extra points proved to
be big at critical points in the contest —
particularly in the decisive fifth game.
During the race to 15 in the finale,
neither team was able to gain control
— as each squad continued trading
points with one another. WHS eventually got over the hump at 19-18 by

scoring a second straight point, allowing the hosts to wrap up the comefrom-behind triumph.
The Blue Angels recorded 48 kills, 40
assists, 27 digs, 12 blocks and nine aces
in the setback. The guests were also successful on 88.9 percent of their service
chances. Jenna Meadows led the service
attack with five aces, followed by Haleigh
Caldwell with two aces. Brooke Pasquale
and Maggie Clagg also had an ace apiece.
Maggie Westfall led the net attack
with 26 kills, followed by Caldwell with
seven kills and Clagg with six kills.
Chelsy Slone and Kassie Shriver also
chipped in four and three kills, respectively. Slone also led GAHS with 4.5
blocks, while Clagg added two blocks.
Shriver dished out a team-best 38 assists for the Angels, while Hannah Roach
had a team-high nine digs. Caldwell and
Meadows also contributed seven and five
digs, respectively, in the setback.

Tornadoes win tri-match at Green Hills CC
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
— Every stroke counts.
The Southern golf team
defeated Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
guest Trimble by six shots
Wednesday evening at
Green Hills Country Club.
SHS recorded a 198, Trimble fired a 204 and Federal
Hocking didn’t post a team
score, as it only had three
golfers. The match was

contested in play six, count
four format.
Bradley McCoy led the
Purple and Gold with a 48,
followed by Jacob Hoback
with a 49. Ryan Shenkelberg
recorded a 50 and Tanner
Thorla fired a 51 to round
out the Southern total. Tanner Thorla with a 51 and
Crew Warden with a 61 also
played but did not count toward the Tornado total.
The Tomcats’ Cole Shiftler was match medalist
with a 47, while Nick Smith

marked a 51. Tyler Sayre
carded a 52, while Brayton
Hazen added a 54 to round
out the THS scoring. Jeff
Browning with a 62 and
Jeff Andrews with a 65 also
played but did not contribute to the Trimble score.
Federal Hocking was led
by Zack Kidder with a 56,
while Zack Cunningham
carded a 72 and Devon
Mobbs marked an 83.
The Tornadoes are now
7-3 in the TVC Hocking.

Alex Hawley/photo

River Valley sophomore Jacey Walter (11) spikes the ball, in front of teammates
Leia Moore (23) and Brea Stout (19), over South Point’s Tia Pettigrew (5). South
Point won Thursday night’s contest 3-1 over the Lady Raiders in Bidwell.

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Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — Not so happy
at home.
The River Valley volleyball team
returned home Thursday night after a three-game road stand. The
Lady Raiders dropped a 3-1 decision to Ohio Valley Conference
guest South Point, making RVHS
0-2 at home this season.
The Lady Pointers (4-1, 2-0
OVC) jumped out to an early lead
and took the first game by a narrow
25-23 margin. The Lady Raiders
(2-3, 1-1) bounced back to take the
second set 25-21 thanks in part to a
six and a five point run. SPHS took
the third game by a 27-25 count to
go back ahead in the match. RVHS
surged to a 10-1 lead in the fourth
set but the Lady Pointers rallied
back to take the 25-17 win and remain perfect in league play.
Rachael Smith led the service
attack for River Valley with 17
points, followed by Chelsea Copley
with nine. Jacey Walter marked six
for RVHS, Brea Stout added five,
while Courtney Smith and Kaela
Shaw each finished with four. Jessica Sanders with two and Leia
Moore with one rounded out the
Sliver and Black scoring.
The net attack for River Valley was paced by Leia Moore with
13 kills and Rachael Smith with

nine. Courtney Smith added five
kills, Copley added three and Walter capped off the total with one.
Moore also had all three of River
Valley’s blocks. Courtney Smith and
Chelsea Copley shared the majority
of the 31 RVHS assists, while Shaw,
Rachael Smith and Alex Truance
each had a team-high four digs.
The Lady Pointers scoring was
led by libero Tayler Dillow with 13
points, followed by Aundrea Bradburn and Halie Powell with eight.
Hannah Carey contributed seven
points, Tia Pettigrew added six,
while Brooklyn Badgett and Charlee
Duncan each finished with five service points. Haley Rawlins rounded
out the SPHS scoring with three
points in the triumph.
Bradburn led the Lady Pointers
with 11 kills, followed by Olivia
Abner with six and Tia Pettigrew
with five. Powell marked four kills,
Tyra Pettigrew added three, Lakin Adams finished with two and
rounding out the South Point net
attack was Carey with one kill.
Tia Pettigrew led the SPHS defense with six blocks, while Abner,
Adams and Tyra Pettigrew each had
one. Dillow finished with a gamehigh 23 digs and Carey finished with
a team-high 13 assists.
The Lady Raiders will hope for a
different result against South Point,
when these teams meet again on September 17th in Lawrence County.

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Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY, Ohio —Worth the trip.
The visiting Athens girls golf team recorded a 228 Thursday night to win a trimatch at the Meigs County Golf Course.
Meigs was runner-up in the match with a
234, while Eastern finished third with a
240.The match was contested under the
play six, count four format.
Athens was led by match medalist Stevie Putnam, who shot a 52 on the par 34
course.Mikala Perry fired a 53 for the victors, while Vanessa Carey marked a 56

and Hannah DeBruin added a 67. Sarah
Johnson (78) also played but did not contribute to the Lady Bulldogs total.
Freshman Kendra Robie led the Lady
Marauders with a 54, followed by Alisha Foster, Karlee Norton and Kylie
Dillon, who each shot 60. Dannett Davis (61), Megan Cleland (64) and Sarah
Curl (72) all played but did not count
toward the MHS total.
The Lady Eagles were led by sophomore Allie Grueser, who shot a 55. Katelyn Edwards fired a 60, Hannah Hawley
marked a 62, while Grace Edwards capped
of the EHS total with a 63.

Defenders fall to South Point, 6-0
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

60445685

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The Defenders drop their
second straight contest.
The Ohio Valley Christian
(1-2) soccer team has now
lost back-to-back games, as
it fell to visiting South Point
6-0 Thursday night in the
Old French City.
The Pointers’ (4-0) Trey
Kearns scored the game’s
opening goal in the fifth

minute on a penalty kick.
Gage Stevens added a goal
in the 20th minute and the
35th minute to push the
SPHS lead to 3-0 at halftime.
After the half Kearns
struck again with a goal at
the 45th minute. Late in
the match Jeremiah Kipp
scored at the 75th minute
and Mark Harris scored his
lone goal at the 78th minute
to seal the 6-0 victory.
South Point finished with
a 14-to-9 advantage in shots

on goal over OVCS. The
Pointers goalkeeper Brady
Rickard finished with seven
saves, while Ohio Valley
Christian received four
saves each from sophomore
Marshall Hood and freshman Micah Sanders.
The Defenders are now
1-2 on the season, while
the Pointers are still unbeaten at 4-0.
This is the lone meeting between South Point and Ohio
Valley Christian this season.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel
SUNDAY,
SEPTEMBER 1, 2013

ALONG THE RIVER

C1

Southern set to open school year in new building
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Ready or
not, the students return
this week at Southern Local Schools.
The last of the districts
in the tri-county area to
begin the 2013-14 school
year, it was for good reason
that the Southern Local
administration and board
of education elected to begin school two weeks later
than others in the region.
When students do return this week it will be in
a new building.
A little more than 14
months after ground was
broken on the new Southern High School, work is
nearly complete.
While there will still be
some of the projects to be
completed after school
begins — including the
gymnasium floor — the
majority of the work will
have been completed by
the time students arrive on
Wednesday morning.
Superintendent
Tony
Deem said on Wednesday
that to metal roof will be installed in the coming days
after arriving last week.
Construction began in
late June 2012 after the
bid by Kinsale Corporation
was approved by the board
of education. The base bid
by Kinsale Corporation
was $10,522,806 — slightly over the revised estimated cost of $10,500,000.
The bond issue/maintenance levy was passed during an August 2010 special
election. The local match
required for the project is
25 percent, with 75 percent
coming from the state.
The school will be unveiled to students and their
parents on Tuesday during
an open house from 4-7 p.m.
“The open house is spe-

cifically to orient students
and their families with the
new building,” said Deem.
“A public open house will
be held at a later date,
probably in late fall.”
One topic that Deem
said has been the subject
of much discussion among
parents and students is
the matter of lunches.
Deem provided The Daily
Sentinel with the following schedule for lunch at
Southern,
10:30 a.m. — kindergarten and first grade
10:45 a.m. — second
and third grades
11:15 a.m. — sixth, seventh and eighth grades
11:45 a.m. — fourth and
fifth grades
12:15 p.m. — ninth,
tenth, eleventh and twelfth
grades
Deem emphasized that
at no time will the high
school students and elementary students be in the
cafeteria at the same time.
In addition to the new
building for the high
school,
improvements
were made to the existing elementary kitchen to
allow it to serve the additional 200 students. New
equipment has been put
in place, including pass
through warmers and refrigerators, and a second
register area. There is also
an expanded area for dry
food storage.
Entry to Southern Elementary will be through the
new high school addition.
No entry will be permitted at the old elementary
entrance, which within a
few weeks will be converted into the Southern Wellness Center. At that time
only those seeking medical
attention will enter here.
All parking will be in
front of the new high

Added kitchen equipment will allow for breakfast and lunch to
be served to all students.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Civitas News Service

The new Southern High School facility sits just to the right of where the former high school stood just a few months ago.
Classes in the new building will begin on Sept. 4, with an open house for only the students and their families on Sept. 3. A
public open house will be held at a later date.

school, which is also where school bus driver. Also, repick-ups and drop-offs for cently hired were Jonathan
both schools will take place. Polster, High School EngStudent drop off will be an- lish and Darren Jackson,
other change for the school Elementary Music.
year. Drop off for parents
There are also a few bus
will be in front of the new changes recently approved
high school where there for the upcoming year. Bus
will be a loop for drivers.
1 will run on Rowe Road;
Bus pick-ups will be in Bus 4 (previously bus 8)
the rear of the building will run on Wells Run; and
and no public access or Bus 14 will run on Smith
drop offs will be permitted Ridge Road.
in the rear of the building
In addition to the new
by the bus garage.
Parents should take note building for the high school,
that Southern Elemen- the administrative office has
tary will begin classes at also relocated. The superin7:50 a.m. and dismiss at tendent and treasurer’s of2:45 p.m. Southern High fices are now located in the
School begins classes at strip mall in the business
7:40 a.m. and dismisses at district near Dollar General
2:45 p.m. Breakfast at the and Home National Bank.
elementary begins at 7:25
Anyone with questions
a.m. Students should not concerning the 2013-14
arrive before 7:25 a.m. as school year may contact The finishing touches were being placed on the grand stairstudents will be unsuper- the school at (740) 949- case last week in preparation for the arrival of students and
vised until this time and 4222 or the bus garage staff. The staircase, which will feature a seating area at the
under the responsibility of at (740) 949-2811 for bus base, leads from the lobby by the gymnasium to the upstairs
their parents.
classroom area.
questions.
Breakfast for all students is free both at the elementary school and high
school. Lunch prices are
up $.05 in each building
for the upcoming year in
accordance with state regulations. Prices are $2.10
for elementary and $2.45
for high school.
New faculty/staff for
the 2013-14 school year
include Tricia McNickle,
preschool to third grade
principal; Chris Carroll,
physical education; Sandra
Mayes, high school English; Courtney Lively, primary intervention; Courtney Guinter, intermediate
intervention/science; Jacynda
Lynch,
fourth
grade language arts; John
Combs, social studies; David Maxson, social studies;
Andrea Cline, guidance; A work area/meeting room for staff members is located on the second floor of the building.
Andrea Edwards, second
grade; Cheryl Smith, pre-

The drop off loop in the front right of the photo will be used by parents who are dropping A cooking area with ample counter space and cooking equipment is in place in the Family and
students off at school each day.
Consumer Science classroom.

Purple lockers with built in combination locks line the upstairs hallway of the school.

The history classroom shown here is similar to many of the other classroom spaces with a computer work station near the windows, smart boards, projector screen and new technology equipment.

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� îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 1, 2013

%9îE96î5:R6C6?46î Fall webworms a nuisance
îJ62CDî&gt;2&lt;6D
When I was
guy
whine.
22, I hitchLast
night,
hiked
from
after I had
Athens, Ohio,
nearly learned
to Yellowstone
to ignore the
National Park
skull-rattling
(and
back)
bellows of the
with a friend
freight trains
I worked with
blasting their
at the Ohio
air horns at
University
the imaginary
golf course. It
pedestrians
seemed
like
who wander
a good idea
the tracks in
at the time.
the wee hours
This weekend, Dr. Don Dudding of the night,
I’m attending
I was roused
Onward
a music fest
from my near
and Awkward
about
three
slumber
by
hours
from
two coeds who
home that redecided to try
quires sleeping in a tent to put up a tent within a
because all the nearby foot and a half of my tent’s
hotels were booked up. Of back screen. You know I’m
course, I drove here in my not making it up when
own truck. I’m about as I say they had at least 50
likely to hitchhike these yards to put down their
days as I am to miss a tent between my tent and
meal — which is to say, the next closest tent.
it’s not going to happen.
So here, I guess, is
After 30 years, my desire perhaps the most profor adventure has dimin- found difference between
ished while my prostate the 22-year-old me and
has grown in almost a the 52-year-old me. The
directly proportional ra- younger me would have
tio. When I was younger, viewed two young women
I used to be able to sleep setting up a tent 18 inchon the ground cuddled in es away from my tent as
the arms of Mother Earth; a sign that there really is
now she pummels me with a God; middle-aged guy
her rock-hard biceps. The wonders why God needs
irony of growing older to add so much Clorox to
while
simultaneously my karma in the middle of
turning into the world’s the night. Because it was
biggest baby is not lost dark and they were misson me. What happened to ing about half of their
that young guy who once tent poles, it took them
headed West with little an extraordinary amount
more than a backpack of time to put up their
and desire to see what’s tent. Their conversation
around the next bend? to work out the logisAmong other things, I’d tics of tent construction
say he found a clue with took almost as much volhis now aching joints.
ume as the nearby train
In the preceding para- horns. They were only
graph, did I write “sleep- able to complete the projing in a tent?” — because ect when one of the two
technically there’s no real young ladies hit upon the
sleeping going on. I’m brilliant idea of attach“camping” in a tent. The ing the poles to their tent
difference between “sleep- with duct tape. When I
ing” and “camping” is, got up this morning, their
while my body does re- tent looked like a Charlie
sides inside a tent during Brown cartoon. But, it
the hours at night typically was still standing so powset aside for slumber, there er to them, I guess. I was
is no actual “sleeping” go- careful not to breathe too
ing on. Okay, here’s where vigorously as I passed by
I slip into my cranky-old- because I did not want to

contribute to their tents
inevitable downfall.
Camping out to go
watch some live rock and
roll, what could be a better way to say goodbye to
summer? The old dude
within me wants to say,
“almost anything else,” but
after I’ve had a little breakfast, there’s still enough
of the young guy in me to
be happy to be here. Coffee cures the morning irritability, and I’ve found a
street vendor who is literally tossing pancakes at his
customers. The street is
littered with his patrons’
near misses. There’s a
sewer grate in front of his
outdoor griddle and embarrassed customers who
drop their pancakes are
kicking them to the curb to
hide their lack of hand-toeye coordination. Not only
is this pancake breakfast
“all you can eat,” it’s also
“all you can drop”, as well.
There are two stages
set up in downtown Troy,
Ohio, where I am, and I’m
happy to report no one is
twerking. In case you’ve
missed out on the whole
Miley Cyrus conversation of the past couple of
weeks, “twerking” is a
dance move that’s something of a hybrid of hip-hop
and epilepsy. Recently the
stalwart editors of the Oxford Dictionary decided to
give the word “twerking”
induction into the official
lexicon of the English language. I’m not sure what
the 22-year-old me would
have thought about adding
twerking to the dictionary,
but 52-year-old me can’t be
bothered. I am off now to
find a band who can rock,
and rock never gets old. As
a closing thought, I remember going to loud concerts
in my youth because “hey,
man, we like it loud.” Now
my generation still like it
loud, but it’s just because it
helps save our hearing-aid
batteries.
I’m kidding about that,
but you know, not really.

Are you noticing light
ohioline.osu.edu.
gray silken webs on wal***
nuts, redbud, hickory, perAre you a landowner
simmon, sweetgum, maple
that needs help in developand fruit trees? These are
ing a plan for your propthe nests of the fall weberty? Are you interested
worm, Hyphantria cunea.
in identifying areas where
Fall webworms enclose
the mushrooms grow, the
leaves and twigs into their
turkey are or where the
nests unlike the spring
deer spend the night? Plan
season’s Eastern Tent catto attend “Creating and
erpillar which nest in limb
Using Woodland Maps”
crotches. Fall webworm
offered on Friday Septemlarvae have been known
ber 13th at Vinton Furnace
Hal Kneen
to feed on over 85 speState Forest. Maps are
cies of trees in the United
Extension Corner
valuable tools that help
States. This pest is native
woodland owners enjoy
to North America and is
and manage their propercommon from Canada into Mexico. ties. This day long educational proIt is one of the few American insect gram is designed to enhance the ability
pests that has been introduced into to use and create woodland maps. ParEurope and Asia. It is common all ticipants in this program will: explore
across Ohio though it seems to have information that can be gleaned from
major outbreaks every few years.
topographical maps; enhance their
This pest usually eats leaves late in ability to use a compass, pacing and
the season and the nests are generally maps to navigate; learn to use Google
concentrated to limited areas. Because Earth and other readily available softof this, little real damage is done to ware to create maps of their woodland
most trees. However, the nests can resources; understand the capabilities
look very unsightly and multiple gen- of GPS (Global Positioning Systems)
erations in long summers can lead to for navigation and mapping woodlands
significant defoliation. The eggs hatch and learn where to acquire topographin about a week and the small mass of ic maps and aerial imagery of their
caterpillars web over single leaves and property. A registration fee of $10 will
feed by skeletonizing. As the caterpil- cover the cost of lunch and program
lars grow, they web over additional materials. Please RSVP by calling OSU
leaves and finally are able to eat the Extension Vinton County at 740-596entire leaf. The larvae mature in about 5212, or email Dave Apsley at apssix weeks, at which time they drop ley.1@osu.edu by September 9.
to the ground to pupate. The moths
“Creating and Using Woodland
emerge over an extended period, and Maps” and the “2nd Friday Series”
we expect two generations a year are are sponsored by the Education and
normally completed in Ohio. This pest Demonstration Subcommittee of the
overwinters in the pupal stage. Pupae Vinton Furnace State Forest with supare usually in the ground but can be lo- port from the ODNR-divisions of Forcated in old nest remains, under loose estry and Wildlife, US Forest Service,
bark and in leaf litter.
Vinton County Soil and Water ConserThough the webs are very unsight- vation District, Ohio State University
ly, damage to most trees is consid- Extension, US Fish and Wildlife Serered to be insignificant. However, if vice, National Wild Turkey Federation,
the population warrants it try the fol- Hocking College, and Glatfelter.
lowing cultural hints to reduce their
***
damage. Remove the nests as they
Are you ready for the Pawpaw Festiform using a gloved hand or use an val September 13-15 at Lake Snowden?
old broom and whirl the sticky nest Yes there is a lot of fun at the festival —
around it and then stomp on the nest music, art, eating — but there is also
to kill the caterpillars. Let nature take an educational tent expounding on the
its course and encourage predators virtues of growing and using pawpaws
(yellow jackets, wasps, predatory in cooking. One the classes is Pawpaw
stink bugs) and parasites to reduce 101 presented by local pawpaw growtheir numbers. If caught as a small
er, Tony Russell. If you are interested
nest, spray a biological spray such as
in growing persimmons, plan to attend
Bacillus thuringiensis kurstaki strain
a 3:40 p.m. class on September 14th
in the nest and surrounding leaves.
given by Jerry Lehman, president of
Other chemical sprays can be used
the Persimmon Association. The comas contact killers and some microplete schedule of events is located on
encapsulated sprays on surrounding
the website Pawpawfest.org.
leaves. Read and follow the pesticide
label. For further information look at Hal Kneen is the Agriculture and Natural Resources
OSU factsheet 2026 entitled, “ Fall Educator for Athens/Meigs, Ohio State University
Webworm Management” located on Extension.

":G6DE@4&lt;î(6A@CE
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers, Inc., livestock report of sales from
August 28, 2013.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers,

$100-$190, Heifers, $100$155; 425-525 pounds,
Steers, $100-$175, Heifers, $100-$150; 550-625
pounds, Steers, $100$160, Heifers, $100-$144;
650-725 pounds, Steers,

$100-$140, Heifers, $100$130; 750-850 pounds,
Steers, $100-$135, Heifers, $95-$118.
Well

Cows
Muscled/Fleshed,

the purchase of a new iPhone, which
will be activated in the store.
It didn’t say how much older
phones would be worth. But other
brokers such as Gazelle.com offer
anywhere from $10 for a working
iPhone 3G to $350 for an iPhone 5
that is in pristine condition.

Congratulations &amp; Thank You to
the Staff and Management at

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
on being given Medicare’s only 5 Star Rating
in the Tri-County area!
www.medicare.gov/nursinghomecompare

Your hard work, excellent care, and
kind, compassionate attitudes have made us the
premier healthcare facility in the Tri-County area.

60445209

“A Celebration of Life”
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com
740-992-6472
����������'%��'�,����� �$#%'�����
�

$1,175; Baby Calves, $35$210; Goats, $32.50-$110;
Lambs, $65-$120; Hogs, $66.

Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $825$1,460; Bred Cows, $460-

Upcoming Specials
9/4/13 — Next sale, 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free

on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740)
339-0241, Stacy at (304)
634-0224, Luke at (740) 6453697, or Mark at (740) 6455708, or visit the website at
www.uproducers.com.

)E2EDîD9@Hî�&gt;6C:42?Dî?@Eî
E92Eî:?E@î5C:G:?8î2?J&gt;@C6

Apple offers iPhone trade-in
ahead of unveiling new phone
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Excited about
the new iPhone expected to be unveiled
Sept. 10? Apple will now join others in allowing you to trade in your old model.
The company said starting Friday
that it would give customers credit
for functioning older models at Apple
Stores. The credit can be used toward

$75-$87;
Medium/Lean,
$66-$74; Thin/Light, Jan$65; Bulls, $75-$100.

WASHINGTON (AP)
— Driving in America
has stalled, leading researchers to ask: Is the
national love affair with
the automobile over?
After rising for decades,
total vehicle use in the
U.S. — the collective miles
people drive — peaked
in August 2007. It then
dropped sharply during
the Great Recession and
has largely plateaued since,
even though the economy
is recovering and the population growing. Just this
week the Federal Highway
Administration reported
vehicle miles traveled during the first half of 2013
were down slightly, continuing the trend.
Even more telling, the
average miles drivers individually rack up peaked in
July 2004 at just over 900
per month, said a study
by Transportation Department economists Don Pickrell and David Pace. By July
of last year, that had fallen
to 820 miles per month,
down about 9 percent. Per
capita automobile use is
now back at the same levels
as in the late 1990s.
Until the mid-1990s,
driving
levels
largely
tracked economic growth,
according to Pickrell and

Pace, who said their conclusions are their own
and not the government’s.
Since then, the economy
has grown more rapidly
than auto use. Gross domestic product declined
for a while during the
recession but reversed
course in 2009. Auto use
has yet to recover.
Meanwhile, the share of
people in their teens, 20s
and 30s with driver’s licenses has been dropping significantly, suggesting that
getting a driver’s license is
no longer the teenage rite
of passage it once was.
Researchers are divided
on the reasons behind the
trends. One camp says the
changes are almost entirely
linked to the economy. In a
few years, as the economy
continues to recover, driving will probably bounce
back, they reason. At the
same time, they acknowledge there could be longterm structural changes in
the economy that would
prevent a return to the levels of driving growth seen
in the past; it’s just too
soon to know.
The other camp acknowledges that economic
factors are important but
says the decline in driving
also reflects fundamental

changes in the way Americans view the automobile.
For commuters stuck in
traffic, getting into a car no
longer correlates with fun.
It’s also becoming more of
a headache to own a car in
central cities and downright difficult to park.
“The idea that the car
means freedom, I think, is
over,” said travel behavior
analyst Nancy McGuckin.
Gone are the days of the
car culture as immortalized
in songs like “Hot Rod Lincoln,” ”Little Deuce Coupe”
and “Pink Cadillac.”
“The car as a fetish
of masculinity is probably over for certain age
groups,” McGuckin said. “I
don’t think young men care
as much about the car they
drive as they use to.”
That’s partly because
cars have morphed into
computers on wheels that
few people dare tinker
with, she said. “You can’t
open the hood and get to
know it the way you used
to,” she said.
Lifestyles are also changing. People are doing more
of their shopping online.
More people are taking
public transit than ever before. And biking and walking to work and for recreation are on the rise.

�Sunday,
1, 2013
SUNDAYSeptember
, SEPTEMBER
1, 2013

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D
COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî�

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
Sept. 2, 2013:
This year you have more drive and
energy than usual. You have what it
takes to hit a home run! Sometimes
you are a bit reticent to share your
thoughts and feelings because of
the responses you have received
in the past. Take some risks. If you
are single, make a point to get to
know someone well before even
thinking about committing. If you are
attached, both of you need to devote
more one-on-one time to the relationship. LEO can be demanding.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You’ll seem nearly unstoppable, but you might have a difficult
moment when an associate challenges you. Don’t take it personally
— just respond appropriately. You
could be tired of this person, but
getting irritated won’t help. Take a
deep breath. Tonight: Go with the
unexpected.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Know when to pull back and
say when enough is enough. You
might be dealing with a difficult person, and you’ll need to get the situation under control. Once you stop
trying, you could gain an insight as to
what is going on. Tonight: At a lastminute Labor Day happening.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You have many opinions
and ideas. Someone might let you
know that he or she has had more
than his or her fill of information; not
everyone is interested in the same
topics you are. Unexpected news
from a friend could put you on a new
path. Tonight: Hang out with pals.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The need to express yourself is crucial to your well-being. A
child or new friend might come off
as being rather testy. Look the other
way, and understand that this has
more to do with the other party than
with you. Tonight: Buy a coveted
item that you have been wanting.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Listen to news more openly, and don’t get bogged down in a
family member’s tale of woe. This
person has been a downer lately.
The unexpected draws positive
results because of your optimism.
You have a unique quality that is
contagious. Tonight: The world is
your oyster.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Assume a low profile, and
you could have the good fortune of
avoiding a difficult situation. You
might have been feeling a little down
as of late, but know that it is only a
passing mood. You will want to withdraw and handle a personal matter.
Tonight: Togetherness works.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
A meeting will allow you
to see the pros and cons of a situation. You are responsible for your
own choices, but the right one will
land you a home run. Follow your
instincts, and you’ll know where to
head in a particular circumstance.
Tonight: Where the crowds are.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You might not be aware of
how stern you seem to others. You
have a tendency to take responsibilities very seriously, and you don’t
smile a lot when handling important
matters. If you could schmooze a little more, the results would be better.
Tonight: Watch some fireworks.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You might want to rethink a
personal situation. How you handle
someone at a distance could define
your relationship much more clearly.
A child or loved one might surprise
you with his or her actions. Be spontaneous, and do not judge. Tonight:
Laugh the night away.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
One-on-one interactions
will be highlighted. Everyone needs
to feel important. Through this type
of contact, you’ll ensure that other
people feel valued. You might discover that a roommate or family
member surprises you with his or her
actions. Tonight: At home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Someone might be too
assertive for your taste. Listen to
what is being suggested, and try
to ignore this person’s attitude. If it
seems like a good idea, go along
with it. If not, say “no.” Getting
caught up in the details won’t serve
you well. Tonight: Go along with a
friend’s request.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
You might be recuperating
from a Labor Day party. A surprising
development could shake you up,
especially if it involves your finances.
Even if you feel lucky, you still
should avoid going beyond what your
budget can handle. Tonight: Take
some much-needed “you” time.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Houston-Rumley
engagement
Jeff and Judy Houston and John and Lisa Rumley announce the engagement and upcoming marriage of their children, Emily Dawn Houston and
David Wayne Rumley.
Emily and David are 2013 graduates of Marshall
University where Emily earned her Bachelor of
Business Administration degree and David earned
a Bachelor of Arts Criminal Justice degree.
The wedding will take place September 7, 2013,
in Ironton, Ohio.

Submitted photo

This photo of Baer family members was taken in 1920. They are
from the left, back, Albert Baer, Joseph Baer, Charles Baer, Jacob Baer and Dana Baer, and front, Leah Baer Nease, Catherine
Grueser Baer, George Baer, Altona Baer Karr and Anna Baer Baily.

Baer family well
represented at reunion
Kaylee and Evan Wilkof

Kennedy-Wilkof wedding
Kaylee Nicole Kennedy, daughter of Darla and Cliff
Kennedy of Rutland and Evan Mason Wilkof, son of Susan
and Sam Wilkof of Canton were married on April 6, 2013.
The wedding and reception was held at Franklin Park
Conservatory in Columbus. The ceremony was officiated
by Rabbi Benjy Bar-Lev and Pastor Brian Dunham.
The bride was attended by Amy Garnes as matron of
honor, with bridesmaids, Caitlin Williamson, cousin of
the bride, and Kristin Wilkof, sister-in-law of the bride.
The best man was Michael Wilkof, brother of the
groom, and the groomsmen were Jonathan Wilkof,
brother of the groom, Scott Kennedy, brother of the
bride. Music was performed by Jamie Bailey, a friend
of the bride. The ushers were Steven Starek and Andrew Reaven, friend of the groom.
The bride graduated from Ohio University with a Bachelor of Science in Early Childhood Education. The groom
graduated from Ohio University with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration.
The couple resides in Athens.

David Rumley and Emily Houston

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APPLE GROVE, W.Va.
— Benjamin Chason will
celebrate his first birthday,
Sunday, September 1, 2013,
with family and friends at 4
p.m. at the Robert C. Byrd
Locks and Dam.
His party will include

food and play and will
also honor Chason’s Korean heritage with traditional clothing.
Chason is the son of Jessica Chason and the grandson of James Chason and
Oak and Timmy Shuler.

Deckerds announce birth
POMEROY
—
Mathew
and
Emily Deckerd of Beloit,
Ohio, are announcing
the birth of their first
child, Griffin Mathew
Deckerd,
born
on
June 18 at Canton. He
weighed 8 pounds, 6
ounces.
Paternal grandparents are Allen Deckerd of Beloit and Beth
Deckerd of Beloit.

His paternal greatgrandparents are Dale
Deckerd of Alliance
and Betty Deckerd of
Brunswick, Ohio.
His maternal grandparents are Keith and
Emma Ashley of Rocksprings, and his maternal
great-grandparents are
June and the late Robert
Ashley of Racine and the
late Ellis and Freda English of Coolville.

POMEROY — The reunion of the descendents of
George and Katherine Grueser Baer was recently held at
the cabin of Horace Karr in Meigs County.
Family members enjoyed a potluck dinner, along with
a display of historical and other pictures of the family.
Group pictures were taken at the reunion.
The father of George Baer, also George, was born in
Germany, and he and his wife, Rozena, arrived in America in 1853, and settled in Forest Run in Meigs County.
They had eight children. Their son, George, and Katherine also raised their family in Forest Run, having five sons
and three daughters. All eight of these children were represented at this reunion, coming from 10 different states.
Attending the reunion were the following family representatives:
Charlie (Esta) Baer family — Betty and Harold Newell,
Kathy Newell, Bill Baer.
Joe (Amanda) Baer Family — Margaret and Carl Tucker, Carl Slurnski, Karen and Dave Spitler.
Anna Baer (John) Baily family — Roscoe and Mary
Wise, Jennifer and Steve Harrison, Megan, Aaron and Rachel Lawhon, Susanna Alleman, Benjamin Alleman, Edward Genheimer, Jeff Genheimer, Bill and Betty Knight,
Evan Knight, Steven Knight, Rick and Tricia Knight, Billy
Knight and Mary Ward, Anita Sheridan, Isabel SheridanRunyon, Christina Sheridan, Katherine Simonton, Judy
Vanica, Jennings Baily Marshall, Marianna and Glenn McDonald, John and Cheryl Baily; Leah Baer (Uswin) Nease
family - Lee Ann Smith, Joshua and Heather Smith, Jean
Nease, Roger Nease.
Dana (Ella) Baer Family — Carolyn Salser, Denney and
Linda Evans, and Jamie Evans.
Albert (Florence) Baer Family — Brian and Susan Ash,
and Ronda Ketchum.
Jake (Lena) Baer Family — Manning Roush, Kimberly
Srnrek, William Srnrek, Amber Smrek, Jordan Smrek,
Harold and Rachel Stout.
Altona Baer (Purley) Karr Family — Horace Karr,
Woodrow Mora, Steve and Jackie Frost, Janet Eblin,
Addie McDaniel, Roger and Susie Karr, Greg, Colt and
Emeri Lloyd, Ryan and Jessica Barnes, Savannah Barnes,
and Derrick Barnes, Marilyn Spencer, Ray Karr, Bill and
Twila Buckley, Brandon, Leah, Clay and Alana Buckley,
Ryan Buckley and Kayla McCarthy, Brent Buckley, Erik
and Jane Ann Aanestad, and Marshall Aanestad.
All family members were given an incomplete copy of
the family tree, with a request to complete their branch
of the family.
The prize for the family member traveling the farthest,
along with the door prize, was won by Jeff Genheimer,
who traveled from California to attend the reunion.

Louisiana chimpanzee wins
first prize in art contest
Benjamin Chason

More than 300 sites ring
bells for MLK speech

Griffin Mathew Deckerd

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Church bells rang out
Wednesday at the National Cathedral and at sites
nationwide to answer a call from one of the most
important civil rights speeches in history to “let
freedom ring.”
Organizers said people at more than 300 locations in nearly every state were ringing their bells
to commemorate Martin Luther King Jr.’s Aug. 28,
1963 “I Have a Dream” speech.
At the National Cathedral in Washington, the central bell tower played “Lift Every Voice and Sing”
from the carillon, along with other hymns and spirituals. The bells rang for about 15 minutes to mark
the moment when the speech was delivered.
“I remember 50 years ago: the marching, the
throngs of people, the speech, the energy,” said
Patty Mason, 69, of Bethesda, Md., who was one
of about two dozen people who gathered outside
the cathedral, gazing up at the bell tower. “It was
amazing, just amazing.”
Commemorations were taking place from a mountain in Georgia carved with the likenesses of Confederate leaders to the far reaches of Alaska, where
participants rang cow bells and bear bells in Juneau.
Many of the commemorations were in sync with
the hour when King gave his speech, 3 p.m. EDT,
though some churches planned to ring their bells
at 3 p.m. local time.
Fifty years ago, as King was wrapping up his
speech at the Lincoln Memorial, he quoted from
the patriotic song, “My Country ‘tis of Thee.” King
implored his audience to “let freedom ring” from
the hilltops and mountains of every state in the nation, some of which he cited by name in his speech.
“When we allow freedom to ring — when we
let it ring from every city and every hamlet,
from every state and every city, we will be able
to speed up that day when all of God’s children,
black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles,
Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join
hands and sing in the words of the old Negro
spiritual, ‘Free at last, free at last, great God almighty, we are free at last,” King said in closing.

NEW ORLEANS (AP)
— A painting by a 37-yearold Louisiana primate
who applies color with his
tongue instead of a brush
has been deemed the finest
chimpanzee art in the land.
Brent, a retired laboratory animal, was the top
vote-getter in an online
chimp art contest organized by the Humane Society of the United States,
which announced the results Thursday. He won
$10,000 for the Chimp Haven sanctuary in northwest
Louisiana.
A Chimp Haven spokeswoman said Brent was
unavailable for comment
Thursday. “I think he’s
asleep,” Ashley Gordon said.
But as the society said
on its website, “The votes
are in, so let the pant hooting begin!” — pant hooting being the characteristic
call of an excited chimp.
Five other sanctuaries
around the country competed, using paintings created during “enrichment
sessions,” which can include any of a wide variety
of activities and playthings.
Chimpanzee researcher
Jane Goodall chose her
favorite from photographs
she was sent. That painting, by Cheetah, a male at
Save the Chimps in Fort
Pierce, Fla., won $5,000 as
Goodall’s choice and another $5,000 for winning second place in online voting,
Humane Society spokeswoman Nicole Ianni said.
Ripley from the Center
for Great Apes in Wauchula, Fla., won third place
and $2,500.
More than 27,000 people
voted, Ianni said in a news
release. The organization
is not giving vote totals

“to keep the focus on the
positive work of the sanctuaries and not necessarily
the ‘winner,’” she said in
an email. The sanctuaries
care for chimpanzees retired from research, entertainment and the pet trade.
Chimp Haven is the national sanctuary for those retired from federal research.
Other submitted paintings were by Jamie, a
female at Chimpanzee
Sanctuary Northwest in
Cle Elum, Wash.; Jenny, a
female at Primate Rescue
Center in Nicholasville,
Ky.; and Patti, a female at
Chimps Inc. in Bend, Ore.
A profile of Brent on the
Humane Society’s website says he has lived at
Chimp Haven since 2006,
is protective of an even
older chimp at the sanctuary and “loves to laugh
and play.” It continues,
“Brent paints only with
his tongue. His unique approach and style, while a
little unorthodox, results
in beautiful pieces of art.”
Cathy Willis Spraetz,
Chimp Haven’s president
and CEO, said she chose
a painting by Brent partly because of that unusual method. She said she
later held a canvas up to
the mesh of his indoor
cage so she could watch
him at work.
Some other chimps use
brushes or point to the colors they want on the canvas, but Brent comes up to
smush pre-applied blobs of
child-safe tempera paints
with his tongue, she said.
“If we handed the canvas
to them where it was on
the inside, they might not
want to hand it back,” she
said. “They might throw it
around and step on it.”

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